msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: Comprehensive Rust 🦀\n" "POT-Creation-Date: 2024-01-24T13:24:49+01:00\n" "PO-Revision-Date: 2023-08-25 14:28-0700\n" "Last-Translator: Yauheni Baltukha \n" "Language-Team: \n" "Language: ru\n" "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n" "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" "Plural-Forms: nplurals=1; plural=0;\n" "X-Generator: Poedit 3.3.2\n" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/index.md msgid "Welcome to Comprehensive Rust 🦀" msgstr "Добро пожаловать в Comprehensive Rust 🦀" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/running-the-course.md msgid "Running the Course" msgstr "Проведение курса" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Course Structure" msgstr "Структура курса" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid "Keyboard Shortcuts" msgstr "Горячие клавиши" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "Translations" msgstr "Переводы" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/cargo.md msgid "Using Cargo" msgstr "Использование Cargo" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Rust Ecosystem" msgstr "Экосистема Rust" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Code Samples" msgstr "Примеры кода" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Running Cargo Locally" msgstr "Локальный запуск Cargo" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 1: Morning" msgstr "День 1: Утро" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Welcome" msgstr "Добро пожаловать" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/hello-world.md src/hello-world/hello-world.md #, fuzzy msgid "Hello, World" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "What is Rust?" msgstr "Что такое Rust?" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Benefits of Rust" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "Playground" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values.md msgid "Types and Values" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/variables.md msgid "Variables" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Values" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "Arithmetic" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "Strings" msgstr "Строки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "Type Inference" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Fibonacci" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/types-and-values/solution.md #: src/control-flow-basics/solution.md src/tuples-and-arrays/solution.md #: src/references/solution.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md #: src/pattern-matching/solution.md src/methods-and-traits/solution.md #: src/generics/solution.md src/std-types/solution.md #: src/std-traits/solution.md src/memory-management/solution.md #: src/smart-pointers/solution.md src/borrowing/solution.md #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md src/iterators/solution.md #: src/modules/solution.md src/testing/solution.md #: src/error-handling/solution.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "Solution" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics.md #, fuzzy msgid "Control Flow Basics" msgstr "Поток управления" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "Conditionals" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "Loops" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "`break` and `continue`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "Blocks and Scopes" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/functions.md msgid "Functions" msgstr "Функции" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "Macros" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Collatz Sequence" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 1: Afternoon" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/tuples-and-arrays.md #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Tuples and Arrays" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/tuples-and-arrays/iteration.md msgid "Array Iteration" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md src/pattern-matching.md msgid "Pattern Matching" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Destructuring" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Nested Arrays" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/references.md msgid "References" msgstr "Ссылки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/references/shared.md #, fuzzy msgid "Shared References" msgstr "Ссылки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/references/exclusive.md #, fuzzy msgid "Exclusive References" msgstr "Висячие ссылки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/references/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Geometry" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types.md msgid "User-Defined Types" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "Named Structs" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "Tuple Structs" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/enums.md #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Enums" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Static and Const" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/aliases.md msgid "Type Aliases" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/user-defined-types/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Elevator Events" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 2: Morning" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "Let Control Flow" msgstr "Поток управления" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Expression Evaluation" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "Methods and Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "Methods" msgstr "Методы" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "Deriving" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "Trait Objects" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Generic Logger" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics.md msgid "Generics" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics/generic-functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "Generic Functions" msgstr "Функции" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "Generic Data Types" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "Trait Bounds" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "`impl Trait`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/generics/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Generic `min`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 2: Afternoon" msgstr "День 2: Вторая половина дня" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types.md msgid "Standard Library Types" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types/std.md msgid "Standard Library" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types/docs.md msgid "Documentation" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Option`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Result`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md #, fuzzy msgid "`String`" msgstr "Строки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types/vec.md msgid "`Vec`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types/hashmap.md src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`HashMap`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-types/exercise.md #, fuzzy msgid "Exercise: Counter" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits.md msgid "Standard Library Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/comparisons.md src/async.md msgid "Comparisons" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "Operators" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "`From` and `Into`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "Casting" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "`Read` and `Write`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Default`, struct update syntax" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "Closures" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/std-traits/exercise.md #, fuzzy msgid "Exercise: ROT13" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 3: Morning" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management.md msgid "Memory Management" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Review of Program Memory" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Approaches to Memory Management" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/ownership.md msgid "Ownership" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/move.md msgid "Move Semantics" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Clone`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/copy-types.md #, fuzzy msgid "Copy Types" msgstr "Составные типы" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Drop`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Builder Type" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/smart-pointers.md msgid "Smart Pointers" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/smart-pointers/box.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`Box`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "`Rc`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/smart-pointers/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Binary Tree" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Day 3: Afternoon" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/borrowing.md msgid "Borrowing" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "Borrowing a Value" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "Borrow Checking" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "Interior Mutability" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/borrowing/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Health Statistics" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "Slices and Lifetimes" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #, fuzzy msgid "Slices: `&[T]`" msgstr "Срезы" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "String References" msgstr "Висячие ссылки" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "Lifetime Annotations" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Lifetime Elision" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Struct Lifetimes" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Protobuf Parsing" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #, fuzzy msgid "Day 4: Morning" msgstr "День 1: Утро" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/iterators.md msgid "Iterators" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/iterators/iterator.md src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Iterator`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "`IntoIterator`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`FromIterator`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/iterators/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Iterator Method Chaining" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/modules.md src/modules/modules.md msgid "Modules" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "Filesystem Hierarchy" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Visibility" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`use`, `super`, `self`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/modules/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Modules for a GUI Library" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing.md src/chromium/testing.md msgid "Testing" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Test Modules" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/other.md msgid "Other Types of Tests" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "Useful Crates" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/googletest.md msgid "GoogleTest" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/mocking.md msgid "Mocking" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/lints.md msgid "Compiler Lints and Clippy" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/testing/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Luhn Algorithm" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #, fuzzy msgid "Day 4: Afternoon" msgstr "День 2: Вторая половина дня" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/error-handling.md msgid "Error Handling" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Panics" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/error-handling/try.md msgid "Try Operator" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/error-handling/try-conversions.md #, fuzzy msgid "Try Conversions" msgstr "Неявные преобразования" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`Error` Trait" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "`thiserror` and `anyhow`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Exercise: Rewriting with `Result`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/unsafe-rust.md src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Unsafe Rust" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Unsafe" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "Dereferencing Raw Pointers" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "Mutable Static Variables" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "Unions" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "Unsafe Functions" msgstr "Функции" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Unsafe Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Exercise: FFI Wrapper" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/android.md msgid "Android" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/setup.md src/chromium/setup.md msgid "Setup" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Build Rules" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Binary" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Library" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/aidl.md msgid "AIDL" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Interface" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Implementation" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Server" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/aidl/deploy.md msgid "Deploy" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Client" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/aidl/changing.md msgid "Changing API" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/logging.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging.md msgid "Logging" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability.md msgid "Interoperability" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "With C" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Calling C with Bindgen" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Calling Rust from C" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp.md msgid "With C++" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "The Bridge Module" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Rust Bridge" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/generated-cpp.md msgid "Generated C++" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "C++ Bridge" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-types.md #, fuzzy msgid "Shared Types" msgstr "Скалярные типы" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-enums.md msgid "Shared Enums" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "Rust Error Handling" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md msgid "C++ Error Handling" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "Additional Types" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Building for Android: C++" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Building for Android: Genrules" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Building for Android: Rust" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "With Java" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/android/morning.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/morning.md src/exercises/bare-metal/afternoon.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/morning.md src/exercises/concurrency/afternoon.md msgid "Exercises" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Comparing Chromium and Cargo Ecosystems" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Policy" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Unsafe Code" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/build-rules/depending.md msgid "Depending on Rust Code from Chromium C++" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "Visual Studio Code" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md #, fuzzy msgid "Exercise" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/testing/rust-gtest-interop.md msgid "`rust_gtest_interop` Library" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/testing/build-gn.md msgid "GN Rules for Rust Tests" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "`chromium::import!` Macro" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Interoperability with C++" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "Example Bindings" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "Limitations of CXX" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "CXX Error Handling" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Error Handling: QR Example" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Error Handling: PNG Example" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Using CXX in Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Adding Third Party Crates" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Configuring Cargo.toml" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md msgid "Configuring `gnrt_config.toml`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "Downloading Crates" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "Generating `gn` Build Rules" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Resolving Problems" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-generate-code.md msgid "Build Scripts Which Generate Code" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "Build Scripts Which Build C++ or Take Arbitrary Actions" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "Depending on a Crate" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Reviews and Audits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Checking into Chromium Source Code" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/keeping-up-to-date.md msgid "Keeping Crates Up to Date" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Bringing It Together - Exercise" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/chromium/solutions.md #, fuzzy msgid "Exercise Solutions" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Bare Metal: Morning" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`no_std`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "A Minimal Example" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/no_std.md src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "`alloc`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers.md msgid "Microcontrollers" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "Raw MMIO" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "PACs" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "HAL Crates" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Board Support Crates" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "The Type State Pattern" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "`embedded-hal`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "`probe-rs` and `cargo-embed`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "Debugging" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Other Projects" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "Compass" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Solutions" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Bare Metal: Afternoon" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Application Processors" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "Getting Ready to Rust" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Inline Assembly" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "MMIO" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Let's Write a UART Driver" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "More Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "A Better UART Driver" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md msgid "Bitflags" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Multiple Registers" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md msgid "Driver" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Using It" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "Exceptions" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "`zerocopy`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "`aarch64-paging`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/useful-crates/buddy_system_allocator.md msgid "`buddy_system_allocator`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/useful-crates/tinyvec.md msgid "`tinyvec`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "`spin`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "`vmbase`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "RTC Driver" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Concurrency: Morning" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Threads" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "Scoped Threads" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/channels.md msgid "Channels" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md msgid "Unbounded Channels" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "Bounded Channels" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "`Send` and `Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/send-sync/send.md msgid "`Send`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "`Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "Examples" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/shared_state.md msgid "Shared State" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "`Arc`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "`Mutex`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/memory-management/review.md #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "Example" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "Dining Philosophers" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "Multi-threaded Link Checker" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Concurrency: Afternoon" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Async Basics" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/async-await.md msgid "`async`/`await`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/futures.md msgid "Futures" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/runtimes.md msgid "Runtimes" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "Tokio" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md src/async/tasks.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Tasks" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/channels.md msgid "Async Channels" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Control Flow" msgstr "Поток управления" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "Join" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "Select" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Pitfalls" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Blocking the Executor" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "`Pin`" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "Async Traits" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md #, fuzzy msgid "Cancellation" msgstr "Переводы" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "Broadcast Chat Application" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Final Words" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/thanks.md msgid "Thanks!" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/glossary.md msgid "Glossary" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md msgid "Other Resources" msgstr "" #: src/SUMMARY.md src/credits.md msgid "Credits" msgstr "" #: src/index.md msgid "" "[![Build workflow](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/" "google/comprehensive-rust/build.yml?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/" "google/comprehensive-rust/actions/workflows/build.yml?query=branch%3Amain) [!" "[GitHub contributors](https://img.shields.io/github/contributors/google/" "comprehensive-rust?style=flat-square)](https://github.com/google/" "comprehensive-rust/graphs/contributors) [![GitHub stars](https://img.shields." "io/github/stars/google/comprehensive-rust?style=flat-square)](https://github." "com/google/comprehensive-rust/stargazers)" msgstr "" #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "This is a free Rust course developed by the Android team at Google. The " "course covers the full spectrum of Rust, from basic syntax to advanced " "topics like generics and error handling." msgstr "" "Это трехдневный курс по языку Rust, разработанный командой Android. Курс " "охватывает весь спектр Rust, от базового синтаксиса до сложных тем, таких " "как обобщения (generics) и обработка ошибок. Последний день курса также " "затрагивает вопросы разработки для Android." #: src/index.md msgid "" "The latest version of the course can be found at . If you are reading somewhere else, please check there " "for updates." msgstr "" #: src/index.md msgid "" "The goal of the course is to teach you Rust. We assume you don't know " "anything about Rust and hope to:" msgstr "" "Цель курса --- научить вас языку Rust. Мы предполагаем, что вы ничего не " "знаете о Rust и надеемся:" #: src/index.md msgid "Give you a comprehensive understanding of the Rust syntax and language." msgstr "Дать достаточно хорошее представление о синтаксисе и семантике Rust." #: src/index.md msgid "Enable you to modify existing programs and write new programs in Rust." msgstr "" "Научить работать с существующим кодом и писать новые программы на Rust." #: src/index.md msgid "Show you common Rust idioms." msgstr "Показать распространённые идиомы языка Rust." #: src/index.md msgid "We call the first four course days Rust Fundamentals." msgstr "" #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Building on this, you're invited to dive into one or more specialized topics:" msgstr "" "Первые три дня познакомят вас с основами Rust. После этого вам предлагается " "углубиться в одну или несколько специализированных тем:" #: src/index.md msgid "" "[Android](android.md): a half-day course on using Rust for Android platform " "development (AOSP). This includes interoperability with C, C++, and Java." msgstr "" "[Android](android.md): рассчитанный на полдня курс по использованию Rust для " "разработки на платформе Android (AOSP). Сюда входит взаимодействие с C, C++ " "и Java." #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Chromium](chromium.md): a half-day course on using Rust within Chromium " "based browsers. This includes interoperability with C++ and how to include " "third-party crates in Chromium." msgstr "" "[Android](android.md): рассчитанный на полдня курс по использованию Rust для " "разработки на платформе Android (AOSP). Сюда входит взаимодействие с C, C++ " "и Java." #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Bare-metal](bare-metal.md): a whole-day class on using Rust for bare-metal " "(embedded) development. Both microcontrollers and application processors are " "covered." msgstr "" "[Bare-metal](bare-metal.md): однодневное занятие по использованию Rust для " "низкоуровневой (embedded) разработки, охватывающее как микроконтроллеры, так " "и обычные процессоры." #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Concurrency](concurrency.md): a whole-day class on concurrency in Rust. We " "cover both classical concurrency (preemptively scheduling using threads and " "mutexes) and async/await concurrency (cooperative multitasking using " "futures)." msgstr "" "[Concurrency](concurrency.md): полный день занятий по изучению " "многозадачности в Rust. Мы рассмотрим как классический подход, использующий " "потоки и мьютексы, так и асинхронный подход с использованием фьючерсов " "(future)." #: src/index.md msgid "Non-Goals" msgstr "За рамками курса" #: src/index.md msgid "" "Rust is a large language and we won't be able to cover all of it in a few " "days. Some non-goals of this course are:" msgstr "" "Rust --- это объёмный язык, и мы не сможем охватить его целиком за несколько " "дней. Темы, выходящие за рамки курса:" #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Learning how to develop macros: please see [Chapter 19.5 in the Rust Book]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch19-06-macros.html) and [Rust by Example]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/macros.html) instead." msgstr "" "Написание макросов, см. [Глава 19.5 в The Rust Book](https://doc.rust-lang." "org/book/ch19-06-macros.html) и [Rust by Example](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "rust-by-example/macros.html)." #: src/index.md msgid "Assumptions" msgstr "Предположения" #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The course assumes that you already know how to program. Rust is a " "statically-typed language and we will sometimes make comparisons with C and " "C++ to better explain or contrast the Rust approach." msgstr "" "Предполагается, что вы уже умеете программировать. Rust --- это статически " "типизированный язык, и иногда мы будем сравнивать его с C и C++, чтобы лучше " "объяснить или подчеркнуть разницу в подходах к написанию кода на Rust." #: src/index.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "If you know how to program in a dynamically-typed language such as Python or " "JavaScript, then you will be able to follow along just fine too." msgstr "" "Если вы знаете, как программировать на языке с динамической типизацией, " "таком как Python или JavaScript, вы сможете успешно пройти этот курс." #: src/index.md msgid "" "This is an example of a _speaker note_. We will use these to add additional " "information to the slides. This could be key points which the instructor " "should cover as well as answers to typical questions which come up in class." msgstr "" "Это пример _заметок для преподавателя_. Мы будем использовать их для " "добавления дополнительной информации к слайдам. Это могут быть ключевые " "моменты, которые преподаватель должен осветить, а также ответы на типичные " "вопросы, которые возникают в ходе прохождения курса." #: src/running-the-course.md src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "This page is for the course instructor." msgstr "Эта страница предназначена для преподавателя курса." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "Here is a bit of background information about how we've been running the " "course internally at Google." msgstr "" "Вот краткая справочная информация о том, как мы проводили курс внутри " "компании Google." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "We typically run classes from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm, with a 1 hour lunch break " "in the middle. This leaves 3 hours for the morning class and 3 hours for the " "afternoon class. Both sessions contain multiple breaks and time for students " "to work on exercises." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "Before you run the course, you will want to:" msgstr "Перед проведением курса желательно:" #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "Make yourself familiar with the course material. We've included speaker " "notes to help highlight the key points (please help us by contributing more " "speaker notes!). When presenting, you should make sure to open the speaker " "notes in a popup (click the link with a little arrow next to \"Speaker " "Notes\"). This way you have a clean screen to present to the class." msgstr "" "Ознакомиться с материалами курса. Мы добавили заметки для преподавателя на " "некоторых страницах, чтобы выделить ключевые моменты (пожалуйста, помогайте " "нам, добавляя свои заметки для преподавателей!). Убедитесь в том, что " "открыли заметки для преподавателя во всплывающем окне (нажмите на ссылку с " "маленькой стрелкой рядом с ”Заметки для преподавателя”). У вас откроется " "отдельное окно с заметками для преподавателя, в то время как основное окно " "вы можете демонстрировать классу." #: src/running-the-course.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Decide on the dates. Since the course takes four days, we recommend that you " "schedule the days over two weeks. Course participants have said that they " "find it helpful to have a gap in the course since it helps them process all " "the information we give them." msgstr "" "Определиться с датами. Поскольку курс требует как минимум три дня, мы " "рекомендуем вам запланировать три дня на протяжении двух недель. По нашему " "опыту, слушатели предпочитают иметь перерывы в течение курса, так как это " "помогает им лучше осмыслить информацию." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "Find a room large enough for your in-person participants. We recommend a " "class size of 15-25 people. That's small enough that people are comfortable " "asking questions --- it's also small enough that one instructor will have " "time to answer the questions. Make sure the room has _desks_ for yourself " "and for the students: you will all need to be able to sit and work with your " "laptops. In particular, you will be doing a lot of live-coding as an " "instructor, so a lectern won't be very helpful for you." msgstr "" "Найти помещение, достаточно просторное для очного участия. Мы рекомендуем, " "чтобы в классе было 15-20 человек. Это довольно немного для того, чтобы " "людям было комфортно задавать вопросы, а у преподавателя было время на то, " "чтобы на них отвечать." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "On the day of your course, show up to the room a little early to set things " "up. We recommend presenting directly using `mdbook serve` running on your " "laptop (see the [installation instructions](https://github.com/google/" "comprehensive-rust#building)). This ensures optimal performance with no lag " "as you change pages. Using your laptop will also allow you to fix typos as " "you or the course participants spot them." msgstr "" "В день занятия приходите в аудиторию немного раньше, чтобы всё подготовить. " "Мы рекомендуем показывать слайды используя `mdbook serve`, запущенного на " "вашем ноутбуке (см. [installation instructions](https://github.com/google/" "comprehensive-rust#building)). Это обеспечивает оптимальную " "производительность без задержек при смене страниц. Использование ноутбука " "также позволит вам исправлять опечатки по мере их обнаружения вами или " "участниками курса." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "Let people solve the exercises by themselves or in small groups. We " "typically spend 30-45 minutes on exercises in the morning and in the " "afternoon (including time to review the solutions). Make sure to ask people " "if they're stuck or if there is anything you can help with. When you see " "that several people have the same problem, call it out to the class and " "offer a solution, e.g., by showing people where to find the relevant " "information in the standard library." msgstr "" "Позвольте участникам решать упражнения самостоятельно или в небольших " "группах. Обычно мы уделяем упражнениям по 30-45 минут утром и во второй " "половине дня (включая время на разбор решений). Обязательно спросите, не " "испытывают ли слушатели трудности и нужно ли с чем-то помочь. Когда вы " "видите, что у нескольких человек одна и та же проблема, сообщите об этом " "классу и предложите решение, например, показав, как найти нужную информацию " "в стандартной библиотеке." #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "That is all, good luck running the course! We hope it will be as much fun " "for you as it has been for us!" msgstr "" "На этом всё, удачи в прохождении курса! Мы надеемся, что вам будет так же " "весело, как и нам!" #: src/running-the-course.md msgid "" "Please [provide feedback](https://github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/" "discussions/86) afterwards so that we can keep improving the course. We " "would love to hear what worked well for you and what can be made better. " "Your students are also very welcome to [send us feedback](https://github.com/" "google/comprehensive-rust/discussions/100)!" msgstr "" "Пожалуйста, [оставьте отзыв](https://github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/" "discussions/86), чтобы мы могли продолжать совершенствовать курс. Мы хотели " "бы услышать, что было хорошо и что можно сделать лучше. Ваши студенты также " "могут [присылать нам свои отзывы](https://github.com/google/comprehensive-" "rust/discussions/100)!" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Rust Fundamentals" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "The first four days make up [Rust Fundamentals](../welcome-day-1.md). The " "days are fast paced and we cover a lot of ground!" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "Course schedule:" msgstr "Структура курса" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 1 Morning (3 hours, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Welcome](../welcome-day-1.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Hello, World](../hello-world.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Types and Values](../types-and-values.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Control Flow Basics](../control-flow-basics.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 1 Afternoon (2 hours and 55 minutes, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Tuples and Arrays](../tuples-and-arrays.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[References](../references.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[User-Defined Types](../user-defined-types.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 2 Morning (3 hours and 5 minutes, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Welcome](../welcome-day-2.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "[Pattern Matching](../pattern-matching.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" "Больше информации об использовании шаблонов в языке Rust можно найти на " "[странице про сопоставление с шаблоном](../pattern-matching.md)." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Methods and Traits](../methods-and-traits.md) (55 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Generics](../generics.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 2 Afternoon (3 hours, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Standard Library Types](../std-types.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Standard Library Traits](../std-traits.md) (1 hour and 40 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 3 Morning (2 hours and 15 minutes, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Welcome](../welcome-day-3.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Memory Management](../memory-management.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Smart Pointers](../smart-pointers.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 3 Afternoon (2 hours and 20 minutes, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Borrowing](../borrowing.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "[Slices and Lifetimes](../slices-and-lifetimes.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 4 Morning (3 hours and 5 minutes, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Welcome](../welcome-day-4.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Iterators](../iterators.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Modules](../modules.md) (40 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Testing](../testing.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Day 4 Afternoon (2 hours, including breaks)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Error Handling](../error-handling.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "[Unsafe Rust](../unsafe-rust.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Deep Dives" msgstr "Глубокое погружение" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "In addition to the 4-day class on Rust Fundamentals, we cover some more " "specialized topics:" msgstr "" "В дополнение к 3-дневному курсу по основам Rust, мы рассмотрим ещё несколько " "специализированных тем:" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Rust in Android" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The [Rust in Android](../android.md) deep dive is a half-day course on using " "Rust for Android platform development. This includes interoperability with " "C, C++, and Java." msgstr "" "[Android Deep Dive](../android.md) --- это полудневный курс по использованию " "Rust для разработки на платформе Android. Сюда входит взаимодействие с C, C+" "+ и Java." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "You will need an [AOSP checkout](https://source.android.com/docs/setup/" "download/downloading). Make a checkout of the [course repository](https://" "github.com/google/comprehensive-rust) on the same machine and move the `src/" "android/` directory into the root of your AOSP checkout. This will ensure " "that the Android build system sees the `Android.bp` files in `src/android/`." msgstr "" "Вам потребуется [AOSP](https://source.android.com/docs/setup/download/" "downloading). Загрузите [репозиторий курса](https://github.com/google/" "comprehensive-rust) на тот же компьютер, что и курс и переместите каталог " "`src/android/` в корневой каталог вашего AOSP. Это гарантирует, что система " "сборки Android увидит файлы `Android.bp` в `src/android/`." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "Ensure that `adb sync` works with your emulator or real device and pre-build " "all Android examples using `src/android/build_all.sh`. Read the script to " "see the commands it runs and make sure they work when you run them by hand." msgstr "" "Убедитесь, что `adb sync` работает с вашим эмулятором или реальным " "устройством, и предварительно соберите все примеры Android, используя `src/" "android/build_all.sh`. Прочтите скрипт, чтобы увидеть команды, которые он " "запускает, и убедитесь, что они работают, когда вы запускаете их вручную." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Rust in Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "The [Rust in Chromium](../chromium.md) deep dive is a half-day course on " "using Rust as part of the Chromium browser. It includes using Rust in " "Chromium's `gn` build system, bringing in third-party libraries (\"crates\") " "and C++ interoperability." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "You will need to be able to build Chromium --- a debug, component build is " "[recommended](../chromium/setup.md) for speed but any build will work. " "Ensure that you can run the Chromium browser that you've built." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Bare-Metal Rust" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The [Bare-Metal Rust](../bare-metal.md) deep dive is a full day class on " "using Rust for bare-metal (embedded) development. Both microcontrollers and " "application processors are covered." msgstr "" "[Bare-Metal Deep Dive](../bare-metal.md): занятие на полный день по " "использованию Rust для низкоуровневой (embedded) разработки. Рассматриваются " "как микроконтроллеры, так и прикладные процессоры." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "For the microcontroller part, you will need to buy the [BBC micro:bit]" "(https://microbit.org/) v2 development board ahead of time. Everybody will " "need to install a number of packages as described on the [welcome page](../" "bare-metal.md)." msgstr "" "Что касается части микроконтроллеров, то вам нужно будет заранее приобрести " "плату разработки [BBC micro:bit](https://microbit.org/) v2. Всем нужно будет " "установить несколько пакетов, как описано на [странице приветствия](../bare-" "metal.md)." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "Concurrency in Rust" msgstr "Конкурентность" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The [Concurrency in Rust](../concurrency.md) deep dive is a full day class " "on classical as well as `async`/`await` concurrency." msgstr "" "[Concurrency Deep Dive](../concurrency.md) это целый день занятий по " "классической, а также `async`/`await` конкурентности." #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "You will need a fresh crate set up and the dependencies downloaded and ready " "to go. You can then copy/paste the examples into `src/main.rs` to experiment " "with them:" msgstr "" "Вам понадобится настроенный новый крейт, а также загруженные зависимости, " "готовые к работе. Затем вы можете скопировать примеры в `src/main.rs`, чтобы " "поэкспериментировать с ними:" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "Format" msgstr "Формат" #: src/running-the-course/course-structure.md msgid "" "The course is meant to be very interactive and we recommend letting the " "questions drive the exploration of Rust!" msgstr "" "Курс задуман весьма интерактивным, и мы рекомендуем, чтобы вопросы " "содействовали изучению Rust!" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid "There are several useful keyboard shortcuts in mdBook:" msgstr "В mdBook есть несколько полезных сочетаний клавиш:" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid "Arrow-Left" msgstr "Стрелка-влево" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid ": Navigate to the previous page." msgstr ": Переход на предыдущую страницу." #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid "Arrow-Right" msgstr "Стрелка-вправо" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid ": Navigate to the next page." msgstr ": Переход на следующую страницу." #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "Ctrl + Enter" msgstr "Ctrl + Enter" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid ": Execute the code sample that has focus." msgstr ": Выполнение примера кода, находящегося в фокусе." #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid "s" msgstr "s" #: src/running-the-course/keyboard-shortcuts.md msgid ": Activate the search bar." msgstr ": Активировать панель поиска." #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "The course has been translated into other languages by a set of wonderful " "volunteers:" msgstr "Курс был переведен на другие языки группой замечательных волонтёров:" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Brazilian Portuguese](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/pt-BR/) " "by [@rastringer](https://github.com/rastringer), [@hugojacob](https://github." "com/hugojacob), [@joaovicmendes](https://github.com/joaovicmendes), and " "[@henrif75](https://github.com/henrif75)." msgstr "" "[Бразильский португальский](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/pt-" "BR/) от [@rastringer](https://github.com/rastringer) и [@hugojacob](https://" "github.com/hugojacob)." #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[Chinese (Simplified)](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/zh-CN/) " "by [@suetfei](https://github.com/suetfei), [@wnghl](https://github.com/" "wnghl), [@anlunx](https://github.com/anlunx), [@kongy](https://github.com/" "kongy), [@noahdragon](https://github.com/noahdragon), [@superwhd](https://" "github.com/superwhd), [@SketchK](https://github.com/SketchK), and [@nodmp]" "(https://github.com/nodmp)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Chinese (Traditional)](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/zh-TW/) " "by [@hueich](https://github.com/hueich), [@victorhsieh](https://github.com/" "victorhsieh), [@mingyc](https://github.com/mingyc), [@kuanhungchen](https://" "github.com/kuanhungchen), and [@johnathan79717](https://github.com/" "johnathan79717)." msgstr "" "[Бразильский португальский](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/pt-" "BR/) от [@rastringer](https://github.com/rastringer) и [@hugojacob](https://" "github.com/hugojacob)." #: src/running-the-course/translations.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "[Korean](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/ko/) by [@keispace]" "(https://github.com/keispace), [@jiyongp](https://github.com/jiyongp), and " "[@jooyunghan](https://github.com/jooyunghan)." msgstr "" "[Корейский](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/ko/) от [@keispace]" "(https://github.com/keispace), [@jiyongp](https://github.com/jiyongp) и " "[@jooyunghan](https://github.com/jooyunghan)." #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[Spanish](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/es/) by [@deavid]" "(https://github.com/deavid)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "Use the language picker in the top-right corner to switch between languages." msgstr "" "Используйте кнопку выбора языка в правом верхнем углу для переключения между " "языками." #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "Incomplete Translations" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "There is a large number of in-progress translations. We link to the most " "recently updated translations:" msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[Bengali](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/bn/) by [@raselmandol]" "(https://github.com/raselmandol)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[French](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/fr/) by [@KookaS]" "(https://github.com/KookaS) and [@vcaen](https://github.com/vcaen)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[German](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/de/) by [@Throvn]" "(https://github.com/Throvn) and [@ronaldfw](https://github.com/ronaldfw)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "[Japanese](https://google.github.io/comprehensive-rust/ja/) by [@CoinEZ-JPN]" "(https://github.com/CoinEZ) and [@momotaro1105](https://github.com/" "momotaro1105)." msgstr "" #: src/running-the-course/translations.md msgid "" "If you want to help with this effort, please see [our instructions](https://" "github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/blob/main/TRANSLATIONS.md) for how to " "get going. Translations are coordinated on the [issue tracker](https://" "github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/issues/282)." msgstr "" "Если вы хотите помочь в этом, пожалуйста, ознакомьтесь с [our instructions]" "(https://github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/blob/main/TRANSLATIONS.md) о " "том, как приступить к работе. Переводы координируются с помощью [issue " "tracker](https://github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/issues/282)." #: src/cargo.md msgid "" "When you start reading about Rust, you will soon meet [Cargo](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/cargo/), the standard tool used in the Rust ecosystem to build " "and run Rust applications. Here we want to give a brief overview of what " "Cargo is and how it fits into the wider ecosystem and how it fits into this " "training." msgstr "" "Когда вы начнете читать о Rust, то вскоре познакомитесь с [Cargo](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/), стандартным инструментом, используемым в " "экосистеме Rust для создания и запуска приложений. Здесь мы хотим дать " "краткий обзор того, что такое Cargo и как он вписывается в более широкую " "экосистему и в этот курс." #: src/cargo.md msgid "Installation" msgstr "Установка" #: src/cargo.md msgid "**Please follow the instructions on .**" msgstr "" #: src/cargo.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "This will give you the Cargo build tool (`cargo`) and the Rust compiler " "(`rustc`). You will also get `rustup`, a command line utility that you can " "use to install to different compiler versions." msgstr "" "Наряду с Cargo и rustc, Rustup будет установлен как утилита командной " "строки, которую вы можете использовать для установки/переключения наборов " "инструментов, настройки кросс-компиляции и т. д." #: src/cargo.md msgid "" "After installing Rust, you should configure your editor or IDE to work with " "Rust. Most editors do this by talking to [rust-analyzer](https://rust-" "analyzer.github.io/), which provides auto-completion and jump-to-definition " "functionality for [VS Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/), [Emacs](https://" "rust-analyzer.github.io/manual.html#emacs), [Vim/Neovim](https://rust-" "analyzer.github.io/manual.html#vimneovim), and many others. There is also a " "different IDE available called [RustRover](https://www.jetbrains.com/rust/)." msgstr "" #: src/cargo.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "On Debian/Ubuntu, you can also install Cargo, the Rust source and the [Rust " "formatter](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt) via `apt`. However, this " "gets you an outdated rust version and may lead to unexpected behavior. The " "command would be:" msgstr "" "В Debian/Ubuntu вы можете установить Cargo, исходный код Rust и [Rust " "formatter](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt) с помощью" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "The Rust Ecosystem" msgstr "Экосистема Rust" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "The Rust ecosystem consists of a number of tools, of which the main ones are:" msgstr "" "Экосистема Rust состоит из ряда инструментов, основными из которых являются:" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "`rustc`: the Rust compiler which turns `.rs` files into binaries and other " "intermediate formats." msgstr "" "`rustc`: компилятор Rust, который превращает файлы `.rs` в исполняемые файлы " "и другие промежуточные форматы." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "`cargo`: the Rust dependency manager and build tool. Cargo knows how to " "download dependencies, usually hosted on , and it will " "pass them to `rustc` when building your project. Cargo also comes with a " "built-in test runner which is used to execute unit tests." msgstr "" "`cargo`: менеджер зависимостей Rust и инструмент сборки. Cargo знает, как " "загрузить зависимости, размещённые на , и передать их " "`rustc` при сборке вашего проекта. Cargo также поставляется со встроенным " "иструментом запуска тестов, который используется для выполнения модульных " "тестов." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "`rustup`: the Rust toolchain installer and updater. This tool is used to " "install and update `rustc` and `cargo` when new versions of Rust are " "released. In addition, `rustup` can also download documentation for the " "standard library. You can have multiple versions of Rust installed at once " "and `rustup` will let you switch between them as needed." msgstr "" "`rustup`: программа установки и обновления набора инструментов Rust. Этот " "инструмент используется для установки и обновления rustc и cargo при выходе " "новых версий Rust. Кроме того, `rustup` также может загружать документацию " "стандартной библиотеки. У вас может быть установлено несколько версий Rust " "одновременно и `rustup` позволит вам переключаться между ними по мере " "необходимости." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md src/hello-world/hello-world.md #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md src/references/exclusive.md #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md src/memory-management/move.md #: src/error-handling/try.md src/android/setup.md src/concurrency/threads.md #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "Key points:" msgstr "Ключевые моменты:" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "Rust has a rapid release schedule with a new release coming out every six " "weeks. New releases maintain backwards compatibility with old releases --- " "plus they enable new functionality." msgstr "" "У Rust стремительный график релизов: новая версия выходит каждые шесть " "недель. Новые версии поддерживают обратную совместимость со старыми версиями " "--- в дополнение они предоставляют новые функциональные возможности." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "There are three release channels: \"stable\", \"beta\", and \"nightly\"." msgstr "Существует три вида релизов: ”stable”, ”beta” и ”nightly”." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "New features are being tested on \"nightly\", \"beta\" is what becomes " "\"stable\" every six weeks." msgstr "" "Новые функции тестируются на ”nightly”, ”beta” --- это то, что становится " "”stable” каждые шесть недель." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "Dependencies can also be resolved from alternative [registries](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/registries.html), git, folders, and more." msgstr "" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "Rust also has [editions](https://doc.rust-lang.org/edition-guide/): the " "current edition is Rust 2021. Previous editions were Rust 2015 and Rust 2018." msgstr "" "У Rust также есть \\[редакции\\]: текущая редакция --- Rust 2021. " "Предыдущими редакциями были Rust 2015 и Rust 2018." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "The editions are allowed to make backwards incompatible changes to the " "language." msgstr "Редакциями позволено вносить обратно--несовместимые изменения в язык." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "To prevent breaking code, editions are opt-in: you select the edition for " "your crate via the `Cargo.toml` file." msgstr "" "Чтобы избежать сбоев, редакцию для своего пакета можно явно указать в файле " "`Cargo.toml`." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "To avoid splitting the ecosystem, Rust compilers can mix code written for " "different editions." msgstr "" "Чтобы избежать разделения экосистемы, компилятор Rust может смешивать код, " "написанный для разных редакций." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "Mention that it is quite rare to ever use the compiler directly not through " "`cargo` (most users never do)." msgstr "" "Стоит упомянуть, что использование компилятора напрямую, а не через `cargo`, " "является редким явлением (большинство пользователей никогда этого не делают)." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "It might be worth alluding that Cargo itself is an extremely powerful and " "comprehensive tool. It is capable of many advanced features including but " "not limited to:" msgstr "" "Cargo сам по себе является чрезвычайно мощным и всеобъемлющим инструментом. " "Он поддерживает множество дополнительных функций, включая, помимо прочего:" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "Project/package structure" msgstr "Структура проекта/пакета" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "[workspaces](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html)" msgstr "" "[workspaces](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html)" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "Dev Dependencies and Runtime Dependency management/caching" msgstr "" "Управление зависимостями для разработки (dev) и времени выполнения (runtime)" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "[build scripting](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/build-scripts." "html)" msgstr "" "[build scripting](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/build-scripts." "html)" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "[global installation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/commands/cargo-install." "html)" msgstr "" "[global installation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/commands/cargo-install." "html)" #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "It is also extensible with sub command plugins as well (such as [cargo " "clippy](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy))." msgstr "" "Он также расширяем с помощью плагинов подкоманд (таких как [cargo clippy]" "(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy))." #: src/cargo/rust-ecosystem.md msgid "" "Read more from the [official Cargo Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/)" msgstr "" "Подробнее читайте в [official Cargo Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/)" #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "Code Samples in This Training" msgstr "Примеры кода в этом курсе" #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "" "For this training, we will mostly explore the Rust language through examples " "which can be executed through your browser. This makes the setup much easier " "and ensures a consistent experience for everyone." msgstr "" "В этом курсе мы в основном будем изучать язык Rust на примерах, которые " "могут быть выполнены в вашем браузере. Это значительно упрощает настройку и " "обеспечивает единообразный опыт для всех." #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "" "Installing Cargo is still encouraged: it will make it easier for you to do " "the exercises. On the last day, we will do a larger exercise which shows you " "how to work with dependencies and for that you need Cargo." msgstr "" "Установка Cargo по-прежнему рекомендуется: это облегчит вам выполнение " "упражнений. В последний день мы выполним более масштабное упражнение, " "которое покажет вам, как работать с зависимостями, и для этого вам " "понадобится Cargo." #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "The code blocks in this course are fully interactive:" msgstr "Блоки кода в этом курсе полностью интерактивны:" #: src/cargo/code-samples.md src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "\"Edit me!\"" msgstr "" #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "You can use " msgstr "Вы можете использовать " #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid " to execute the code when focus is in the text box." msgstr " для выполнения кода, когда фокус ввода находится в текстовом поле." #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "" "Most code samples are editable like shown above. A few code samples are not " "editable for various reasons:" msgstr "" "Большинство примеров кода доступны для редактирования, как показано выше. " "Несколько примеров кода недоступны для редактирования по разным причинам:" #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "" "The embedded playgrounds cannot execute unit tests. Copy-paste the code and " "open it in the real Playground to demonstrate unit tests." msgstr "" "Встроенный в страницу редактор кода не может запускать модульные тесты. " "Скопируйте код и откройте его в Rust Playground, чтобы продемонстрировать " "модульные тесты." #: src/cargo/code-samples.md msgid "" "The embedded playgrounds lose their state the moment you navigate away from " "the page! This is the reason that the students should solve the exercises " "using a local Rust installation or via the Playground." msgstr "" "Встроенные в страницу редакторы кода теряют своё состояние в тот момент, " "когда вы уходите со страницы! Именно по этой причине учащиеся должны " "выполнять упражнения, используя локальную установку Rust или Rust Playground." #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "Running Code Locally with Cargo" msgstr "Запуск кода локально с помощью Cargo" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "If you want to experiment with the code on your own system, then you will " "need to first install Rust. Do this by following the [instructions in the " "Rust Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-01-installation.html). This " "should give you a working `rustc` and `cargo`. At the time of writing, the " "latest stable Rust release has these version numbers:" msgstr "" "Если вы хотите поэкспериментировать с кодом на своей системе, то вам нужно " "будет сначала установить Rust. Сделайте это, следуя [инструкциям в The Rust " "Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch01-01-installation.html). В вашей " "системе появятся инструменты `rustc` и `cargo`. На момент написания статьи " "последний стабильный выпуск Rust имеет следующие версии:" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "You can use any later version too since Rust maintains backwards " "compatibility." msgstr "" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "With this in place, follow these steps to build a Rust binary from one of " "the examples in this training:" msgstr "" "После этого выполните следующие шаги, чтобы собрать исполняемый файл на " "основе одного из примеров в этом курсе:" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "Click the \"Copy to clipboard\" button on the example you want to copy." msgstr "" "Нажмите кнопку ”Copy to clipboard” на примере кода, который вы хотите " "скопировать." #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "Use `cargo new exercise` to create a new `exercise/` directory for your code:" msgstr "" "Используйте `cargo new exercise`, чтобы создать новую директорию `exercise/` " "для вашего кода:" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "Navigate into `exercise/` and use `cargo run` to build and run your binary:" msgstr "" "Перейдите в директорию `exercise/` и выполните `cargo run` для сборки и " "запуска исполняемого файла:" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "Replace the boiler-plate code in `src/main.rs` with your own code. For " "example, using the example on the previous page, make `src/main.rs` look like" msgstr "" "Замените шаблонный код в `src/main.rs` своим кодом. Например, используя " "пример кода с предыдущей страницы, сделайте `src/main.rs` похожим на" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "Use `cargo run` to build and run your updated binary:" msgstr "" "Используйте `cargo run` для сборки и запуска обновленного исполняемого файла:" #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "Use `cargo check` to quickly check your project for errors, use `cargo " "build` to compile it without running it. You will find the output in `target/" "debug/` for a normal debug build. Use `cargo build --release` to produce an " "optimized release build in `target/release/`." msgstr "" "Используйте `cargo check` для быстрой проверки проекта на наличие ошибок и " "`cargo build` для компиляции проекта без его запуска. Вы найдете результат в " "директории `target/debug/` для отладочной сборки. Используйте `cargo build --" "release` для создания оптимизированной финальной сборки в `target/release/`." #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "You can add dependencies for your project by editing `Cargo.toml`. When you " "run `cargo` commands, it will automatically download and compile missing " "dependencies for you." msgstr "" "Вы можете добавить зависимости для вашего проекта, отредактировав файл " "`Cargo.toml`. Когда вы запустите команду `cargo`, она автоматически загрузит " "и скомпилирует недостающие зависимости для вас." #: src/cargo/running-locally.md msgid "" "Try to encourage the class participants to install Cargo and use a local " "editor. It will make their life easier since they will have a normal " "development environment." msgstr "" "Предложите участникам занятия установить Cargo и использовать локальный " "редактор. Это облегчит им жизнь, так как у них будет подходящая среда " "разработки." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "Welcome to Day 1" msgstr "Добро пожаловать в День 1" #: src/welcome-day-1.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "This is the first day of Rust Fundamentals. We will cover a lot of ground " "today:" msgstr "Это первый день курса. Сегодня мы пройдёмся по многим темам:" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "Basic Rust syntax: variables, scalar and compound types, enums, structs, " "references, functions, and methods." msgstr "" "Базовый синтаксис Rust: переменные, скалярные и составные типы, " "перечисления, структуры, ссылки, функции и методы." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "Types and type inference." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "Control flow constructs: loops, conditionals, and so on." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "User-defined types: structs and enums." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "Pattern matching: destructuring enums, structs, and arrays." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md src/welcome-day-2.md src/welcome-day-3.md #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "Schedule" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md src/welcome-day-2.md #: src/welcome-day-2-afternoon.md src/welcome-day-3.md #: src/welcome-day-3-afternoon.md src/welcome-day-4.md #: src/welcome-day-4-afternoon.md msgid "In this session:" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "[Welcome](./welcome-day-1.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "[Hello, World](./hello-world.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "[Types and Values](./types-and-values.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "[Control Flow Basics](./control-flow-basics.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md src/welcome-day-2-afternoon.md msgid "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 3 hours" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "Please remind the students that:" msgstr "Пожалуйста, напомните студентам, что:" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "They should ask questions when they get them, don't save them to the end." msgstr "" "Они могут задавать вопросы по мере их появления, не откладывая их до конца." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "The class is meant to be interactive and discussions are very much " "encouraged!" msgstr "Занятие задумано как интерактивное, и дискуссии крайне приветствуются!" #: src/welcome-day-1.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "As an instructor, you should try to keep the discussions relevant, i.e., " "keep the discussions related to how Rust does things vs some other language. " "It can be hard to find the right balance, but err on the side of allowing " "discussions since they engage people much more than one-way communication." msgstr "" "Как преподаватель, вы должны стараться поддерживать релевантность дискуссий, " "например, поддерживать обсуждения, связанные с тем, как в Rust делается что-" "либо в сравнении с каким--либо другим языком. Бывает трудно найти " "правильный баланс, но все же сделайте выбор в пользу наличия дискуссий, " "поскольку они вовлекают учащихся гораздо больше, чем одностороннее общение." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "The questions will likely mean that we talk about things ahead of the slides." msgstr "" "Часто вопросы будут приводить к обсуждениям, опережающим порядок показа " "слайдов." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "This is perfectly okay! Repetition is an important part of learning. " "Remember that the slides are just a support and you are free to skip them as " "you like." msgstr "" "Это совершенно нормально! Повторение --- важная часть обучения. Помните, что " "слайды --- это всего лишь вспомогательный материал, и вы вольны пропускать " "их по своему усмотрению." #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "The idea for the first day is to show the \"basic\" things in Rust that " "should have immediate parallels in other languages. The more advanced parts " "of Rust come on the subsequent days." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1.md msgid "" "If you're teaching this in a classroom, this is a good place to go over the " "schedule. Note that there is an exercise at the end of each segment, " "followed by a break. Plan to cover the exercise solution after the break. " "The times listed here are a suggestion in order to keep the course on " "schedule. Feel free to be flexible and adjust as necessary!" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md src/types-and-values.md src/control-flow-basics.md #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md src/references.md src/user-defined-types.md #: src/pattern-matching.md src/methods-and-traits.md src/generics.md #: src/std-types.md src/std-traits.md src/memory-management.md #: src/smart-pointers.md src/borrowing.md src/slices-and-lifetimes.md #: src/iterators.md src/modules.md src/testing.md src/error-handling.md #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "In this segment:" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md msgid "[What is Rust?](./hello-world/what-is-rust.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md msgid "[Hello, World](./hello-world/hello-world.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md msgid "[Benefits of Rust](./hello-world/benefits.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md msgid "[Playground](./hello-world/playground.md) (2 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world.md msgid "This segment should take about 20 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "" "Rust is a new programming language which had its [1.0 release in 2015]" "(https://blog.rust-lang.org/2015/05/15/Rust-1.0.html):" msgstr "" "Rust --- это новый язык программирования, [версия 1.0](https://blog.rust-" "lang.org/2015/05/15/Rust-1.0.html) которого была выпущена в 2015 году:" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Rust is a statically compiled language in a similar role as C++" msgstr "" "Rust --- это статически компилируемый язык, выступающий в той же роли, что и " "C++." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "`rustc` uses LLVM as its backend." msgstr "`rustc` использует LLVM в качестве бэкенда." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "" "Rust supports many [platforms and architectures](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "nightly/rustc/platform-support.html):" msgstr "" "Rust поддерживает множество [платформ и архитектур](https://doc.rust-lang." "org/nightly/rustc/platform-support.html):" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "x86, ARM, WebAssembly, ..." msgstr "x86, ARM, WebAssembly, …" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Linux, Mac, Windows, ..." msgstr "Linux, Mac, Windows, …" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Rust is used for a wide range of devices:" msgstr "Rust используется для широкого спектра устройств:" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "firmware and boot loaders," msgstr "прошивки и загрузчики," #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "smart displays," msgstr "смарт-экраны," #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "mobile phones," msgstr "мобильные устройства," #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "desktops," msgstr "настольные компьютеры," #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "servers." msgstr "серверы." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Rust fits in the same area as C++:" msgstr "Rust подходит для той же области, что и C++:" #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "High flexibility." msgstr "Высокая гибкость." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "High level of control." msgstr "Высокий уровень контроля." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Can be scaled down to very constrained devices such as microcontrollers." msgstr "" "Может использоваться на очень ограниченных устройствах, таких как мобильные " "телефоны." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Has no runtime or garbage collection." msgstr "Не имеет среды выполнения или сборки мусора." #: src/hello-world/what-is-rust.md msgid "Focuses on reliability and safety without sacrificing performance." msgstr "" "Ориентирован на надежность и безопасность без ущерба для производительности." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "" "Let us jump into the simplest possible Rust program, a classic Hello World " "program:" msgstr "" "Давайте перейдём к самой простой из возможных программ на Rust, классической " "программе Привет, мир!" #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "\"Hello 🌍!\"" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "What you see:" msgstr "Что вы видите:" #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "Functions are introduced with `fn`." msgstr "Функции объявляются с помощью `fn`." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "Blocks are delimited by curly braces like in C and C++." msgstr "Блоки разделяются фигурными скобками, как в C и C++." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "The `main` function is the entry point of the program." msgstr "Функция `main` является точкой входа в программу." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "Rust has hygienic macros, `println!` is an example of this." msgstr "В Rust есть макросы, например `println!`." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "Rust strings are UTF-8 encoded and can contain any Unicode character." msgstr "Строки закодированы в UTF-8 и могут содержать любой символ Юникода." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "This slide tries to make the students comfortable with Rust code. They will " "see a ton of it over the next four days so we start small with something " "familiar." msgstr "" "На этом слайде мы пытаемся помочь студентам ознакомиться с кодом на Rust. В " "течение следующих четырёх дней они увидят его в большом количестве, поэтому " "мы начинаем с чего-то знакомого." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Rust is very much like other languages in the C/C++/Java tradition. It is " "imperative and it doesn't try to reinvent things unless absolutely necessary." msgstr "" "Rust очень похож на другие языки, такие как C/C++/Java. Rust императивный " "(не функциональный), и он не пытается что--то изобретать заново без крайней " "необходимости." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "Rust is modern with full support for things like Unicode." msgstr "" "Rust --- это современный язык с полной поддержкой таких вещей, как Юникод." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Rust uses macros for situations where you want to have a variable number of " "arguments (no function [overloading](../control-flow-basics/functions.md))." msgstr "" "Rust использует макросы для ситуаций, когда вы хотите иметь переменное " "количество аргументов (без [перегрузки](basic-syntax/functions-interlude.md) " "функций)." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "" "Macros being 'hygienic' means they don't accidentally capture identifiers " "from the scope they are used in. Rust macros are actually only [partially " "hygienic](https://veykril.github.io/tlborm/decl-macros/minutiae/hygiene." "html)." msgstr "" "„Гигиеничность“ макросов означает, что они случайно не захватывают " "идентификаторы из области, в которой они используются. Макросы в Rust на " "самом деле гигиеничны лишь [частично](https://veykril.github.io/tlborm/decl-" "macros/minutiae/hygiene.html)." #: src/hello-world/hello-world.md msgid "" "Rust is multi-paradigm. For example, it has powerful [object-oriented " "programming features](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch17-00-oop.html), and, " "while it is not a functional language, it includes a range of [functional " "concepts](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch13-00-functional-features.html)." msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Some unique selling points of Rust:" msgstr "Некоторые уникальные преимущества Rust:" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "_Compile time memory safety_ - whole classes of memory bugs are prevented at " "compile time" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No uninitialized variables." msgstr "Нет неинициализированных переменных." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No double-frees." msgstr "Нет двойных освобождений." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No use-after-free." msgstr "Нет использования-после-освобождения (use-after-free)." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No `NULL` pointers." msgstr "Нет `NULL` указателей." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No forgotten locked mutexes." msgstr "Нет забытых заблокированных мьютексов." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No data races between threads." msgstr "Нет гонок данных между потоками." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No iterator invalidation." msgstr "Нет инвалидации итераторов." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "_No undefined runtime behavior_ - what a Rust statement does is never left " "unspecified" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Array access is bounds checked." msgstr "Проверка границ массива." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md #, fuzzy msgid "Integer overflow is defined (panic or wrap-around)." msgstr "Определено целочисленное переполнение." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "_Modern language features_ - as expressive and ergonomic as higher-level " "languages" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Enums and pattern matching." msgstr "Перечисления и сопоставление с образцом." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Generics." msgstr "Обобщения (generics)." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "No overhead FFI." msgstr "Нет накладных расходов для FFI." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Zero-cost abstractions." msgstr "Абстракции с нулевой стоимостью (zero-cost abstractions)." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Great compiler errors." msgstr "Отличные ошибки компилятора." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Built-in dependency manager." msgstr "Встроенный менеджер зависимостей." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Built-in support for testing." msgstr "Встроенная поддержка тестирования." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "Excellent Language Server Protocol support." msgstr "Великолепная поддержка протокола языкового сервера (LSP)." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "Do not spend much time here. All of these points will be covered in more " "depth later." msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "Make sure to ask the class which languages they have experience with. " "Depending on the answer you can highlight different features of Rust:" msgstr "" "Обязательно спросите учащихся, с какими языками у них есть опыт работы. В " "зависимости от ответа вы можете подчеркнуть различные особенности Rust:" #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "Experience with C or C++: Rust eliminates a whole class of _runtime errors_ " "via the borrow checker. You get performance like in C and C++, but you don't " "have the memory unsafety issues. In addition, you get a modern language with " "constructs like pattern matching and built-in dependency management." msgstr "" "Опыт работы с C или C++: Rust устраняет целый класс _ошибок времени " "выполнения_ с помощью анализатора заимствований. Вы получаете " "производительность, как в C и C++, минуя проблем с безопасностью памяти. " "Кроме того, вы получаете современный язык с такими конструкциями, как " "сопоставление с образцом и встроенное управление зависимостями." #: src/hello-world/benefits.md msgid "" "Experience with Java, Go, Python, JavaScript...: You get the same memory " "safety as in those languages, plus a similar high-level language feeling. In " "addition you get fast and predictable performance like C and C++ (no garbage " "collector) as well as access to low-level hardware (should you need it)" msgstr "" "Опыт работы с Java, Go, Python, JavaScript…: Вы получаете ту же безопасность " "памяти, что и в этих языках, плюс схожее чувство языка высокого уровня. В " "дополнение к этому, вы получаете высокую и предсказуемую производительность, " "такую как в C и C++ (без сборщика мусора), а также доступ к аппаратному " "обеспечению (если он понадобится)." #: src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "" "The [Rust Playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/) provides an easy way to " "run short Rust programs, and is the basis for the examples and exercises in " "this course. Try running the \"hello-world\" program it starts with. It " "comes with a few handy features:" msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "" "Under \"Tools\", use the `rustfmt` option to format your code in the " "\"standard\" way." msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "" "Rust has two main \"profiles\" for generating code: Debug (extra runtime " "checks, less optimization) and Release (fewer runtime checks, lots of " "optimization). These are accessible under \"Debug\" at the top." msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "" "If you're interested, use \"ASM\" under \"...\" to see the generated " "assembly code." msgstr "" #: src/hello-world/playground.md msgid "" "As students head into the break, encourage them to open up the playground " "and experiment a little. Encourage them to keep the tab open and try things " "out during the rest of the course. This is particularly helpful for advanced " "students who want to know more about Rust's optimizations or generated " "assembly." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Variables](./types-and-values/variables.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Values](./types-and-values/values.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Arithmetic](./types-and-values/arithmetic.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Strings](./types-and-values/strings.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Type Inference](./types-and-values/inference.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md msgid "[Exercise: Fibonacci](./types-and-values/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values.md src/testing.md src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "This segment should take about 1 hour and 5 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/variables.md msgid "" "Rust provides type safety via static typing. Variable bindings are made with " "`let`:" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/variables.md src/control-flow-basics/loops.md #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"x: {x}\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/variables.md msgid "" "// x = 20;\n" " // println!(\"x: {x}\");\n" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/variables.md msgid "" "Uncomment the `x = 20` to demonstrate that variables are immutable by " "default. Add the `mut` keyword to allow changes." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/variables.md msgid "" "The `i32` here is the type of the variable. This must be known at compile " "time, but type inference (covered later) allows the programmer to omit it in " "many cases." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "" "Here are some basic built-in types, and the syntax for literal values of " "each type." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/values.md src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Types" msgstr "Типы" #: src/types-and-values/values.md src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Literals" msgstr "Литералы" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Signed integers" msgstr "Знаковые целые числа" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`i8`, `i16`, `i32`, `i64`, `i128`, `isize`" msgstr "`i8`, `i16`, `i32`, `i64`, `i128`, `isize`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md #, fuzzy msgid "`-10`, `0`, `1_000`, `123_i64`" msgstr "`-10`, `0`, `1_000`, `123i64`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Unsigned integers" msgstr "Беззнаковые целые числа" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`u8`, `u16`, `u32`, `u64`, `u128`, `usize`" msgstr "`u8`, `u16`, `u32`, `u64`, `u128`, `usize`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md #, fuzzy msgid "`0`, `123`, `10_u16`" msgstr "`0`, `123`, `10u16`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Floating point numbers" msgstr "Числа с плавающей запятой" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`f32`, `f64`" msgstr "`f32`, `f64`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md #, fuzzy msgid "`3.14`, `-10.0e20`, `2_f32`" msgstr "`3.14`, `-10.0e20`, `2f32`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Unicode scalar values" msgstr "Символы Юникода" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`char`" msgstr "`char`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`'a'`, `'α'`, `'∞'`" msgstr "`'a'`, `'α'`, `'∞'`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "Booleans" msgstr "Логические значения" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`bool`" msgstr "`bool`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`true`, `false`" msgstr "`true`, `false`" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "The types have widths as follows:" msgstr "Типы имеют следующие размеры:" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`iN`, `uN`, and `fN` are _N_ bits wide," msgstr "`iN`, `uN` и `fN` -- _N_ бит," #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "`isize` and `usize` are the width of a pointer," msgstr "`isize` и `usize` -- размерность указателя," #: src/types-and-values/values.md #, fuzzy msgid "`char` is 32 bits wide," msgstr "`char` -- 32 бита," #: src/types-and-values/values.md #, fuzzy msgid "`bool` is 8 bits wide." msgstr "`bool` -- 8 бит." #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "There are a few syntaxes which are not shown above:" msgstr "Существует несколько вариантов синтаксиса, которые не показаны выше:" #: src/types-and-values/values.md msgid "" "All underscores in numbers can be left out, they are for legibility only. So " "`1_000` can be written as `1000` (or `10_00`), and `123_i64` can be written " "as `123i64`." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "\"result: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "" "This is the first time we've seen a function other than `main`, but the " "meaning should be clear: it takes three integers, and returns an integer. " "Functions will be covered in more detail later." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "Arithmetic is very similar to other languages, with similar precedence." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "" "What about integer overflow? In C and C++ overflow of _signed_ integers is " "actually undefined, and might do different things on different platforms or " "compilers. In Rust, it's defined." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "" "Change the `i32`'s to `i16` to see an integer overflow, which panics " "(checked) in a debug build and wraps in a release build. There are other " "options, such as overflowing, saturating, and carrying. These are accessed " "with method syntax, e.g., `(a * b).saturating_add(b * c).saturating_add(c * " "a)`." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/arithmetic.md msgid "" "In fact, the compiler will detect overflow of constant expressions, which is " "why the example requires a separate function." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "Rust has two types to represent strings, both of which will be covered in " "more depth later. Both _always_ store UTF-8 encoded strings." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md #, fuzzy msgid "`String` - a modifiable, owned string." msgstr "`String` --- изменяемый строковый буфер." #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "`&str` - a read-only string. String literals have this type." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "\"Greetings\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "\"🪐\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "\", \"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "\"final sentence: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "\"{:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "//println!(\"{:?}\", &sentence[12..13]);\n" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "This slide introduces strings. Everything here will be covered in more depth " "later, but this is enough for subsequent slides and exercises to use strings." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "Invalid UTF-8 in a string is UB, and this not allowed in safe Rust." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "`String` is a user-defined type with a constructor (`::new()`) and methods " "like `s.push_str(..)`." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "The `&` in `&str` indicates that this is a reference. We will cover " "references later, so for now just think of `&str` as a unit meaning \"a read-" "only string\"." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "The commented-out line is indexing into the string by byte position. " "`12..13` does not end on a character boundary, so the program panics. Adjust " "it to a range that does, based on the error message." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/strings.md msgid "" "Raw strings allow you to create a `&str` value with escapes disabled: " "`r\"\\n\" == \"\\\\n\"`. You can embed double-quotes by using an equal " "amount of `#` on either side of the quotes:" msgstr "" "Сырые строки позволяют создавать значение `&str` с отключенным " "экранированием: `r\"\\n\" == \"\\\\n\"`. Вы можете поставить двойные " "кавычки, используя равное количество символов `#` с обеих сторон кавычек:" #: src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "Rust will look at how the variable is _used_ to determine the type:" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "" "This slide demonstrates how the Rust compiler infers types based on " "constraints given by variable declarations and usages." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "" "It is very important to emphasize that variables declared like this are not " "of some sort of dynamic \"any type\" that can hold any data. The machine " "code generated by such declaration is identical to the explicit declaration " "of a type. The compiler does the job for us and helps us write more concise " "code." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "" "When nothing constrains the type of an integer literal, Rust defaults to " "`i32`. This sometimes appears as `{integer}` in error messages. Similarly, " "floating-point literals default to `f64`." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/inference.md msgid "// ERROR: no implementation for `{float} == {integer}`\n" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md msgid "" "The first and second Fibonacci numbers are both `1`. For n>2, the n'th " "Fibonacci number is calculated recursively as the sum of the n-1'th and " "n-2'th Fibonacci numbers." msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md msgid "" "Write a function `fib(n)` that calculates the n'th Fibonacci number. When " "will this function panic?" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md msgid "// The base case.\n" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "\"Implement this\"" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md msgid "// The recursive case.\n" msgstr "" #: src/types-and-values/exercise.md src/types-and-values/solution.md msgid "\"fib(n) = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "[Conditionals](./control-flow-basics/conditionals.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "[Loops](./control-flow-basics/loops.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "" "[break and continue](./control-flow-basics/break-continue.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "" "[Blocks and Scopes](./control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "[Functions](./control-flow-basics/functions.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "[Macros](./control-flow-basics/macros.md) (2 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Collatz Sequence](./control-flow-basics/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics.md src/tuples-and-arrays.md src/borrowing.md msgid "This segment should take about 1 hour" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "Much of the Rust syntax will be familiar to you from C, C++ or Java:" msgstr "Большая часть синтаксиса Rust будет знакома вам по C, C++ или Java:" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md #, fuzzy msgid "Blocks are delimited by curly braces." msgstr "Блоки и области видимости разделены фигурными скобками." #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "" "Line comments are started with `//`, block comments are delimited by `/* ... " "*/`." msgstr "" "Строковые комментарии начинаются с `//`, блочные комментарии заключены в `/* " "…*/`." #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "Keywords like `if` and `while` work the same." msgstr "Ключевые слова, такие как `if` и `while`, работают так же." #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "Variable assignment is done with `=`, comparison is done with `==`." msgstr "" "Присваивание переменной выполняется с помощью `=`, сравнение выполняется с " "помощью `==`." #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "`if` expressions" msgstr "Выражение `if`" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "" "You use [`if` expressions](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/" "if-expr.html#if-expressions) exactly like `if` statements in other languages:" msgstr "" "[Выражение `if`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/if-expr." "html#if-expressions) работает так же, как и оператор `if` в других языках:" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "\"small\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "\"biggish\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "\"huge\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "" "In addition, you can use `if` as an expression. The last expression of each " "block becomes the value of the `if` expression:" msgstr "" "Помимо этого, можно использовать `if` как выражение. Последнее выражение " "внутри одного из блоков (в зависимости от значения условия) становится " "значением всего выражения `if`:" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "\"large\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "\"number size: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Because `if` is an expression and must have a particular type, both of its " "branch blocks must have the same type. Show what happens if you add `;` " "after `\"small\"` in the second example." msgstr "" "Обе ветки выражения `if` должны быть одинакового типа. Попробуйте показать, " "что происходит, если добавить `;` после `x / 2` во втором примере." #: src/control-flow-basics/conditionals.md msgid "" "When `if` is used in an expression, the expression must have a `;` to " "separate it from the next statement. Remove the `;` before `println!` to see " "the compiler error." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "There are three looping keywords in Rust: `while`, `loop`, and `for`:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md #, fuzzy msgid "`while`" msgstr "Выражение `while`" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The [`while` keyword](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/loop-" "expr.html#predicate-loops) works much like in other languages, executing the " "loop body as long as the condition is true." msgstr "" "[Ключевое слово `while`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/" "loop-expr.html#predicate-loops)\n" "работает примерно так же, как и в других языках программирования" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "\"Final x: {x}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "`for`" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "" "The [`for` loop](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/keyword.for.html) iterates " "over ranges of values:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "`loop`" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "" "The [`loop` statement](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/keyword.loop.html) just " "loops forever, until a `break`." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "\"{i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "" "We will discuss iteration later; for now, just stick to range expressions." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/loops.md msgid "" "Note that the `for` loop only iterates to `4`. Show the `1..=5` syntax for " "an inclusive range." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "" "If you want to exit any kind of loop early, use [`break`](https://doc.rust-" "lang.org/reference/expressions/loop-expr.html#break-expressions). For " "`loop`, this can take an optional expression that becomes the value of the " "`loop` expression." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "" "If you want to immediately start the next iteration use [`continue`](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/loop-expr.html#continue-expressions)." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "\"{result}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "" "Both `continue` and `break` can optionally take a label argument which is " "used to break out of nested loops:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "\"x: {x}, i: {i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "" "In this case we break the outer loop after 3 iterations of the inner loop." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/break-continue.md msgid "" "Note that `loop` is the only looping construct which returns a non-trivial " "value. This is because it's guaranteed to be entered at least once (unlike " "`while` and `for` loops)." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "Blocks" msgstr "Блоки" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "A block in Rust contains a sequence of expressions, enclosed by braces `{}`. " "Each block has a value and a type, which are those of the last expression of " "the block:" msgstr "" "Блоки в языке Rust имеют тип и значение, которые равны типу и значению " "последнего выражения в блоке. Например:" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"y: {y}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "If the last expression ends with `;`, then the resulting value and type is " "`()`." msgstr "" "Однако, если за последним выражением в блоке следует `;`, то результатом " "такого блока (а также его тип) будет `()`." #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "Scopes and Shadowing" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "A variable's scope is limited to the enclosing block." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "" "You can shadow variables, both those from outer scopes and variables from " "the same scope:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"before: {a}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md src/std-traits/from-and-into.md #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"hello\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"inner scope: {a}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"shadowed in inner scope: {a}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "\"after: {a}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "" "You can show how the value of the block changes by changing the last line in " "the block. For instance, adding/removing a semicolon or using a `return`." msgstr "" "Можно показать, как меняется значение блока при изменении последней строки " "в блоке. Например, можно добавить/убрать точку с запятой или использовать " "`return`." #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "" "Show that a variable's scope is limited by adding a `b` in the inner block " "in the last example, and then trying to access it outside that block." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "" "Shadowing is different from mutation, because after shadowing both " "variable's memory locations exist at the same time. Both are available under " "the same name, depending where you use it in the code." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "A shadowing variable can have a different type." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/blocks-and-scopes.md msgid "" "Shadowing looks obscure at first, but is convenient for holding on to values " "after `.unwrap()`." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md msgid "" "Declaration parameters are followed by a type (the reverse of some " "programming languages), then a return type." msgstr "" "В объявлении функции за каждым параметром следует его тип (противоположно " "некоторым языкам программирования), затем тип возвращаемого значения." #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The last expression in a function body (or any block) becomes the return " "value. Simply omit the `;` at the end of the expression. The `return` " "keyword can be used for early return, but the \"bare value\" form is " "idiomatic at the end of a function (refactor `gcd` to use a `return`)." msgstr "" "Последнее выражение в теле функции (или любом блоке) становится возвращаемым " "значением. Просто отбросьте символ `;` в конце выражения." #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md msgid "" "Some functions have no return value, and return the 'unit type', `()`. The " "compiler will infer this if the `-> ()` return type is omitted." msgstr "" "Некоторые функции не имеют возвращаемого значения и возвращают ‘тип unit’, " "`()`. Компилятор определит это, если возвращаемый тип `-> ()` не указан." #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Overloading is not supported -- each function has a single implementation." msgstr "Каждая функция имеет единственную реализацию:" #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md msgid "" "Always takes a fixed number of parameters. Default arguments are not " "supported. Macros can be used to support variadic functions." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Always takes a single set of parameter types. These types can be generic, " "which will be covered later." msgstr "Всегда принимает один набор типов параметров." #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "Macros are expanded into Rust code during compilation, and can take a " "variable number of arguments. They are distinguished by a `!` at the end. " "The Rust standard library includes an assortment of useful macros." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "`println!(format, ..)` prints a line to standard output, applying formatting " "described in [`std::fmt`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fmt/index.html)." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "`format!(format, ..)` works just like `println!` but returns the result as a " "string." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "`dbg!(expression)` logs the value of the expression and returns it." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "`todo!()` marks a bit of code as not-yet-implemented. If executed, it will " "panic." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "`unreachable!()` marks a bit of code as unreachable. If executed, it will " "panic." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "\"{n}! = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "The takeaway from this section is that these common conveniences exist, and " "how to use them. Why they are defined as macros, and what they expand to, is " "not especially critical." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/macros.md msgid "" "The course does not cover defining macros, but a later section will describe " "use of derive macros." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "" "The [Collatz Sequence](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collatz_conjecture) is " "defined as follows, for an arbitrary n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "1" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid " greater than zero:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "If _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "i" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ is 1, then the sequence terminates at _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ is even, then _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "i+1" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid " = n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid " / 2_." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ is odd, then _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid " = 3 * n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid " + 1_." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "For example, beginning with _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 3:" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "3 is odd, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "2" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 3 * 3 + 1 = 10;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "10 is even, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "3" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 10 / 2 = 5;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "5 is odd, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "4" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 3 * 5 + 1 = 16;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "16 is even, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "5" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 16 / 2 = 8;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "8 is even, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "6" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 8 / 2 = 4;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "4 is even, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "7" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 4 / 2 = 2;" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "2 is even, so _n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "8" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "_ = 1; and" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "the sequence terminates." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md msgid "" "Write a function to calculate the length of the collatz sequence for a given " "initial `n`." msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/exercise.md src/control-flow-basics/solution.md msgid "/// Determine the length of the collatz sequence beginning at `n`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/control-flow-basics/solution.md src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "\"Length: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md src/welcome-day-2-afternoon.md #: src/welcome-day-3-afternoon.md src/welcome-day-4-afternoon.md #, fuzzy msgid "Welcome Back" msgstr "Добро пожаловать" #: src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md msgid "[Tuples and Arrays](./tuples-and-arrays.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md msgid "[References](./references.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md msgid "[User-Defined Types](./user-defined-types.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-1-afternoon.md msgid "" "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 2 hours and 55 " "minutes" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "" "[Tuples and Arrays](./tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "[Array Iteration](./tuples-and-arrays/iteration.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "[Pattern Matching](./tuples-and-arrays/match.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "[Destructuring](./tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "[Exercise: Nested Arrays](./tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "" "Tuples and arrays are the first \"compound\" types we have seen. All " "elements of an array have the same type, while tuples can accommodate " "different types. Both types have a size fixed at compile time." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "Arrays" msgstr "Массивы" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "`[T; N]`" msgstr "`[T; N]`" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "`[20, 30, 40]`, `[0; 3]`" msgstr "`[20, 30, 40]`, `[0; 3]`" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "Tuples" msgstr "Кортежи" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "`()`, `(T,)`, `(T1, T2)`, ..." msgstr "`()`, `(T,)`, `(T1, T2)`, ..." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "`()`, `('x',)`, `('x', 1.2)`, ..." msgstr "`()`, `('x',)`, `('x', 1.2)`, ..." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Array assignment and access:" msgstr "Объявление массива и доступ к нему:" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Tuple assignment and access:" msgstr "Объявление кортежа и доступ к нему:" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Arrays:" msgstr "Массивы:" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "A value of the array type `[T; N]` holds `N` (a compile-time constant) " "elements of the same type `T`. Note that the length of the array is _part of " "its type_, which means that `[u8; 3]` and `[u8; 4]` are considered two " "different types. Slices, which have a size determined at runtime, are " "covered later." msgstr "" "Массивы содержат элементы одного типа `T`, и имеют длину `N`, которая " "является константой времени компиляции. Обратите внимание, что длина массива " "является _частью его типа_, это значит, что `[u8; 3]` и `[u8; 4]` являются " "двумя разными типами." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "" "Try accessing an out-of-bounds array element. Array accesses are checked at " "runtime. Rust can usually optimize these checks away, and they can be " "avoided using unsafe Rust." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "We can use literals to assign values to arrays." msgstr "Мы можем использовать литералы для присваивания значений массивам." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The `println!` macro asks for the debug implementation with the `?` format " "parameter: `{}` gives the default output, `{:?}` gives the debug output. " "Types such as integers and strings implement the default output, but arrays " "only implement the debug output. This means that we must use debug output " "here." msgstr "" "В функции main оператор print запрашивает отладочную реализацию используя " "параметр форматирования `?`: `{}` выдает представление по умолчанию, `{:?}` " "выдает отладочное представление. Мы также могли бы использовать `{a}` и " "`{a:?}` без указания значений после строки формата." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "" "Adding `#`, eg `{a:#?}`, invokes a \"pretty printing\" format, which can be " "easier to read." msgstr "" "Добавление `#`, например `{a:#?}`, позволяет использовать формат ”красивой " "печати”, который может облегчить чтение." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Tuples:" msgstr "Кортежи:" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Like arrays, tuples have a fixed length." msgstr "Как и массивы, кортежи имеют фиксированную длину." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "Tuples group together values of different types into a compound type." msgstr "Кортежи группируют значения разных типов в составной тип." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md msgid "" "Fields of a tuple can be accessed by the period and the index of the value, " "e.g. `t.0`, `t.1`." msgstr "" "Доступ к полям кортежа можно получить используя точку и индекс значения, " "например `t.0`, `t.1`." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The empty tuple `()` is also known as the \"unit type\". It is both a type, " "and the only valid value of that type --- that is to say both the type and " "its value are expressed as `()`. It is used to indicate, for example, that a " "function or expression has no return value, as we'll see in a future slide." msgstr "" "Пустой кортеж `()` также известен как ”единичный тип”. Это одновременно и " "тип, и единственное допустимое значение этого типа --- и тип, и его значение " "выражаются как `()`. Он используется, например, для указания того, что " "функция или выражение не имеет возвращаемого значения, как мы увидим на " "следующем слайде." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/tuples-and-arrays.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "You can think of it as `void` that can be familiar to you from other " "programming languages." msgstr "" "Вы можете думать о нем как о `void`, который может быть знаком вам по другим " "языкам программирования." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/iteration.md msgid "The `for` statement supports iterating over arrays (but not tuples)." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/iteration.md msgid "" "This functionality uses the `IntoIterator` trait, but we haven't covered " "that yet." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/iteration.md msgid "" "The `assert_ne!` macro is new here. There are also `assert_eq!` and `assert!" "` macros. These are always checked while, debug-only variants like " "`debug_assert!` compile to nothing in release builds." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "The `match` keyword lets you match a value against one or more _patterns_. " "The comparisons are done from top to bottom and the first match wins." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "The patterns can be simple values, similarly to `switch` in C and C++:" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "'x'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "'q'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "\"Quitting\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md src/std-traits/solution.md #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'a'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "'s'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "'w'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "'d'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "\"Moving around\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md src/error-handling/exercise.md #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'0'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md src/error-handling/exercise.md #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'9'" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "\"Number input\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "\"Lowercase: {key}\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "\"Something else\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "The `_` pattern is a wildcard pattern which matches any value. The " "expressions _must_ be irrefutable, meaning that it covers every possibility, " "so `_` is often used as the final catch-all case." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "Match can be used as an expression. Just like `if`, each match arm must have " "the same type. The type is the last expression of the block, if any. In the " "example above, the type is `()`." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "A variable in the pattern (`key` in this example) will create a binding that " "can be used within the match arm." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "A match guard causes the arm to match only if the condition is true." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "Key Points:" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "You might point out how some specific characters are being used when in a " "pattern" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "`|` as an `or`" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "`..` can expand as much as it needs to be" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "`1..=5` represents an inclusive range" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "`_` is a wild card" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "Match guards as a separate syntax feature are important and necessary when " "we wish to concisely express more complex ideas than patterns alone would " "allow." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "They are not the same as separate `if` expression inside of the match arm. " "An `if` expression inside of the branch block (after `=>`) happens after the " "match arm is selected. Failing the `if` condition inside of that block won't " "result in other arms of the original `match` expression being considered." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/match.md msgid "" "The condition defined in the guard applies to every expression in a pattern " "with an `|`." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "" "Destructuring is a way of extracting data from a data structure by writing a " "pattern that is matched up to the data structure, binding variables to " "subcomponents of the data structure." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "You can destructure tuples and arrays by matching on their elements:" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"on Y axis\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"on X axis\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"left of Y axis\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"below X axis\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"first quadrant\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"Tell me about {triple:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"First is 0, y = {y}, and z = {z}\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"First is 1 and the rest were ignored\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "\"All elements were ignored\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "Create a new array pattern using `_` to represent an element." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "Add more values to the array." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "" "Point out that how `..` will expand to account for different number of " "elements." msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/destructuring.md msgid "Show matching against the tail with patterns `[.., b]` and `[a@..,b]`" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md msgid "Arrays can contain other arrays:" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md msgid "What is the type of this variable?" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Use an array such as the above to write a function `transpose` which will " "transpose a matrix (turn rows into columns):" msgstr "" "Используя приведенное выше, напишите функцию `pretty_print`, которая красиво " "печатает матрицу и функцию `transpose`, которая транспонирует матрицу " "(превращает строки в столбцы):" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md msgid "Hard-code both functions to operate on 3 × 3 matrices." msgstr "" "Запрограммируйте обе функции так, чтобы они работали с матрицами размером 3 " "× 3." #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md msgid "" "Copy the code below to and implement the " "functions:" msgstr "" "Скопируйте приведенный ниже код в и реализуйте " "функции:" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md src/borrowing/exercise.md #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "// TODO: remove this when you're done with your implementation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md src/tuples-and-arrays/solution.md msgid "// <-- the comment makes rustfmt add a newline\n" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md src/tuples-and-arrays/solution.md msgid "\"matrix: {:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/exercise.md src/tuples-and-arrays/solution.md msgid "\"transposed: {:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/tuples-and-arrays/solution.md msgid "//\n" msgstr "" #: src/references.md msgid "[Shared References](./references/shared.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/references.md msgid "[Exclusive References](./references/exclusive.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/references.md msgid "[Exercise: Geometry](./references/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/references.md src/user-defined-types.md src/pattern-matching.md msgid "This segment should take about 50 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "A reference provides a way to access another value without taking " "responsibility for the value, and is also called \"borrowing\". Shared " "references are read-only, and the referenced data cannot change." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "A shared reference to a type `T` has type `&T`. A reference value is made " "with the `&` operator. The `*` operator \"dereferences\" a reference, " "yielding its value." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "Rust will statically forbid dangling references:" msgstr "Rust статически запрещает висячие ссылки:" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "A reference is said to \"borrow\" the value it refers to, and this is a good " "model for students not familiar with pointers: code can use the reference to " "access the value, but is still \"owned\" by the original variable. The " "course will get into more detail on ownership in day 3." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "References are implemented as pointers, and a key advantage is that they can " "be much smaller than the thing they point to. Students familiar with C or C+" "+ will recognize references as pointers. Later parts of the course will " "cover how Rust prevents the memory-safety bugs that come from using raw " "pointers." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "Rust does not automatically create references for you - the `&` is always " "required." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Rust will auto-dereference in some cases, in particular when invoking " "methods (try `r.count_ones()`). There is no need for an `->` operator like " "in C++." msgstr "" "В некоторых случаях Rust будет автоматически разыменовывать ссылки, в " "частности, при вызове методов (попробуйте `ref_x.count_ones()`)." #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "In this example, `r` is mutable so that it can be reassigned (`r = &b`). " "Note that this re-binds `r`, so that it refers to something else. This is " "different from C++, where assignment to a reference changes the referenced " "value." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "A shared reference does not allow modifying the value it refers to, even if " "that value was mutable. Try `*r = 'X'`." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "" "Rust is tracking the lifetimes of all references to ensure they live long " "enough. Dangling references cannot occur in safe Rust. `x_axis` would return " "a reference to `point`, but `point` will be deallocated when the function " "returns, so this will not compile." msgstr "" #: src/references/shared.md msgid "We will talk more about borrowing when we get to ownership." msgstr "Мы подробнее поговорим о заимствовании, когда перейдем к владению." #: src/references/exclusive.md msgid "" "Exclusive references, also known as mutable references, allow changing the " "value they refer to. They have type `&mut T`." msgstr "" #: src/references/exclusive.md msgid "" "\"Exclusive\" means that only this reference can be used to access the " "value. No other references (shared or exclusive) can exist at the same time, " "and the referenced value cannot be accessed while the exclusive reference " "exists. Try making an `&point.0` or changing `point.0` while `x_coord` is " "alive." msgstr "" #: src/references/exclusive.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Be sure to note the difference between `let mut x_coord: &i32` and `let " "x_coord: &mut i32`. The first one represents a shared reference which can be " "bound to different values, while the second represents an exclusive " "reference to a mutable value." msgstr "" "Обратите внимание на разницу между `let mut ref_x: &i32` и `let ref_x: &mut " "i32`. Первая представляет собой изменяемую ссылку, которая может быть " "привязана к разным значениям, в то время как вторая --- ссылку на изменяемое " "значение." #: src/references/exercise.md msgid "" "We will create a few utility functions for 3-dimensional geometry, " "representing a point as `[f64;3]`. It is up to you to determine the function " "signatures." msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md msgid "" "// Calculate the magnitude of a vector by summing the squares of its " "coordinates\n" "// and taking the square root. Use the `sqrt()` method to calculate the " "square\n" "// root, like `v.sqrt()`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md msgid "" "// Normalize a vector by calculating its magnitude and dividing all of its\n" "// coordinates by that magnitude.\n" msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md msgid "// Use the following `main` to test your work.\n" msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md src/references/solution.md msgid "\"Magnitude of a unit vector: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md src/references/solution.md msgid "\"Magnitude of {v:?}: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/references/exercise.md src/references/solution.md msgid "\"Magnitude of {v:?} after normalization: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/references/solution.md msgid "/// Calculate the magnitude of the given vector.\n" msgstr "" #: src/references/solution.md msgid "" "/// Change the magnitude of the vector to 1.0 without changing its " "direction.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "[Named Structs](./user-defined-types/named-structs.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "[Tuple Structs](./user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "[Enums](./user-defined-types/enums.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "" "[Static and Const](./user-defined-types/static-and-const.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "[Type Aliases](./user-defined-types/aliases.md) (2 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Elevator Events](./user-defined-types/exercise.md) (15 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "Like C and C++, Rust has support for custom structs:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "\"{} is {} years old\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"Peter\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "\"Avery\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "\"Jackie\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "Structs work like in C or C++." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "Like in C++, and unlike in C, no typedef is needed to define a type." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "Unlike in C++, there is no inheritance between structs." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "" "This may be a good time to let people know there are different types of " "structs." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "" "Zero-sized structs (e.g. `struct Foo;`) might be used when implementing a " "trait on some type but don’t have any data that you want to store in the " "value itself." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "" "The next slide will introduce Tuple structs, used when the field names are " "not important." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "" "If you already have variables with the right names, then you can create the " "struct using a shorthand." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/named-structs.md msgid "" "The syntax `..avery` allows us to copy the majority of the fields from the " "old struct without having to explicitly type it all out. It must always be " "the last element." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "If the field names are unimportant, you can use a tuple struct:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "\"({}, {})\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "This is often used for single-field wrappers (called newtypes):" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "\"Ask a rocket scientist at NASA\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "// ...\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "" "Newtypes are a great way to encode additional information about the value in " "a primitive type, for example:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "The number is measured in some units: `Newtons` in the example above." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "" "The value passed some validation when it was created, so you no longer have " "to validate it again at every use: `PhoneNumber(String)` or `OddNumber(u32)`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "" "Demonstrate how to add a `f64` value to a `Newtons` type by accessing the " "single field in the newtype." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "" "Rust generally doesn’t like inexplicit things, like automatic unwrapping or " "for instance using booleans as integers." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "Operator overloading is discussed on Day 3 (generics)." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/tuple-structs.md msgid "" "The example is a subtle reference to the [Mars Climate Orbiter](https://en." "wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Climate_Orbiter) failure." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "The `enum` keyword allows the creation of a type which has a few different " "variants:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "// Simple variant\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "// Tuple variant\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "// Struct variant\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "\"On this turn: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md #, fuzzy msgid "Enumerations allow you to collect a set of values under one type." msgstr "Байтовые строки позволяют создать значение `&[u8]`:" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "`Direction` is a type with variants. There are two values of `Direction`: " "`Direction::Left` and `Direction::Right`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "`PlayerMove` is a type with three variants. In addition to the payloads, " "Rust will store a discriminant so that it knows at runtime which variant is " "in a `PlayerMove` value." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "This might be a good time to compare structs and enums:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "In both, you can have a simple version without fields (unit struct) or one " "with different types of fields (variant payloads)." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "You could even implement the different variants of an enum with separate " "structs but then they wouldn’t be the same type as they would if they were " "all defined in an enum." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "Rust uses minimal space to store the discriminant." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "If necessary, it stores an integer of the smallest required size" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "If the allowed variant values do not cover all bit patterns, it will use " "invalid bit patterns to encode the discriminant (the \"niche " "optimization\"). For example, `Option<&u8>` stores either a pointer to an " "integer or `NULL` for the `None` variant." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "You can control the discriminant if needed (e.g., for compatibility with C):" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "Without `repr`, the discriminant type takes 2 bytes, because 10001 fits 2 " "bytes." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #: src/memory-management/review.md src/memory-management/move.md #: src/smart-pointers/box.md src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "More to Explore" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "Rust has several optimizations it can employ to make enums take up less " "space." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "Null pointer optimization: For [some types](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" "option/#representation), Rust guarantees that `size_of::()` equals " "`size_of::>()`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/enums.md msgid "" "Example code if you want to show how the bitwise representation _may_ look " "like in practice. It's important to note that the compiler provides no " "guarantees regarding this representation, therefore this is totally unsafe." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "Static and constant variables are two different ways to create globally-" "scoped values that cannot be moved or reallocated during the execution of " "the program." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "`const`" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "Constant variables are evaluated at compile time and their values are " "inlined wherever they are used:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "According to the [Rust RFC Book](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/0246-const-" "vs-static.html) these are inlined upon use." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "Only functions marked `const` can be called at compile time to generate " "`const` values. `const` functions can however be called at runtime." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "`static`" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "Static variables will live during the whole execution of the program, and " "therefore will not move:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Welcome to RustOS 3.14\"" msgstr "Добро пожаловать в День 1" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "\"{BANNER}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "As noted in the [Rust RFC Book](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/0246-const-" "vs-static.html), these are not inlined upon use and have an actual " "associated memory location. This is useful for unsafe and embedded code, and " "the variable lives through the entirety of the program execution. When a " "globally-scoped value does not have a reason to need object identity, " "`const` is generally preferred." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Mention that `const` behaves semantically similar to C++'s `constexpr`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "`static`, on the other hand, is much more similar to a `const` or mutable " "global variable in C++." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "`static` provides object identity: an address in memory and state as " "required by types with interior mutability such as `Mutex`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "It isn't super common that one would need a runtime evaluated constant, but " "it is helpful and safer than using a static." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Properties table:" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Property" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Static" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Constant" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Has an address in memory" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Yes" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "No (inlined)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #, fuzzy msgid "Lives for the entire duration of the program" msgstr "Функция `main` является точкой входа в программу." #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "No" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Can be mutable" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Yes (unsafe)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Evaluated at compile time" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Yes (initialised at compile time)" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Inlined wherever it is used" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "" "Because `static` variables are accessible from any thread, they must be " "`Sync`. Interior mutability is possible through a [`Mutex`](https://doc.rust-" "lang.org/std/sync/struct.Mutex.html), atomic or similar." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/static-and-const.md msgid "Thread-local data can be created with the macro `std::thread_local`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/aliases.md msgid "" "A type alias creates a name for another type. The two types can be used " "interchangeably." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/aliases.md msgid "// Aliases are more useful with long, complex types:\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/aliases.md msgid "C programmers will recognize this as similar to a `typedef`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md msgid "" "We will create a data structure to represent an event in an elevator control " "system. It is up to you to define the types and functions to construct " "various events. Use `#[derive(Debug)]` to allow the types to be formatted " "with `{:?}`." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md msgid "" "This exercise only requires creating and populating data structures so that " "`main` runs without errors. The next part of the course will cover getting " "data out of these structures." msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "" "/// An event in the elevator system that the controller must react to.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md msgid "// TODO: add required variants\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A direction of travel.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car has arrived on the given floor.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car doors have opened.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car doors have closed.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "" "/// A directional button was pressed in an elevator lobby on the given " "floor.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A floor button was pressed in the elevator car.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"A ground floor passenger has pressed the up button: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"The car has arrived on the ground floor: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"The car door opened: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"A passenger has pressed the 3rd floor button: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"The car door closed: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/exercise.md src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "\"The car has arrived on the 3rd floor: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A button was pressed.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car has arrived at the given floor.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car's doors have opened.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// The car's doors have closed.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A floor is represented as an integer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A user-accessible button.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A button in the elevator lobby on the given floor.\n" msgstr "" #: src/user-defined-types/solution.md msgid "/// A floor button within the car.\n" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "Welcome to Day 2" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "" "Now that we have seen a fair amount of Rust, today will focus on Rust's type " "system:" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "Pattern matching: extracting data from structures." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "Methods: associating functions with types." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "Traits: behaviors shared by multiple types." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "Generics: parameterizing types on other types." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "" "Standard library types and traits: a tour of Rust's rich standard library." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "[Welcome](./welcome-day-2.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md #, fuzzy msgid "[Pattern Matching](./pattern-matching.md) (50 minutes)" msgstr "" "Больше информации об использовании шаблонов в языке Rust можно найти на " "[странице про сопоставление с шаблоном](../pattern-matching.md)." #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "[Methods and Traits](./methods-and-traits.md) (55 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md msgid "[Generics](./generics.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2.md src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "" "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 3 hours and 5 " "minutes" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching.md msgid "[Destructuring](./pattern-matching/destructuring.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching.md msgid "[Let Control Flow](./pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Expression Evaluation](./pattern-matching/exercise.md) (30 " "minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Like tuples, structs and enums can also be destructured by matching:" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Structs" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"x.0 = 1, b = {b}, y = {y}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"y = 2, x = {i:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"y = {y}, other fields were ignored\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "Patterns can also be used to bind variables to parts of your values. This is " "how you inspect the structure of your types. Let us start with a simple " "`enum` type:" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"cannot divide {n} into two equal parts\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"{n} divided in two is {half}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "\"sorry, an error happened: {msg}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "Here we have used the arms to _destructure_ the `Result` value. In the first " "arm, `half` is bound to the value inside the `Ok` variant. In the second " "arm, `msg` is bound to the error message." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Change the literal values in `foo` to match with the other patterns." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "Add a new field to `Foo` and make changes to the pattern as needed." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "The distinction between a capture and a constant expression can be hard to " "spot. Try changing the `2` in the second arm to a variable, and see that it " "subtly doesn't work. Change it to a `const` and see it working again." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "The `if`/`else` expression is returning an enum that is later unpacked with " "a `match`." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "You can try adding a third variant to the enum definition and displaying the " "errors when running the code. Point out the places where your code is now " "inexhaustive and how the compiler tries to give you hints." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "The values in the enum variants can only be accessed after being pattern " "matched." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "Demonstrate what happens when the search is inexhaustive. Note the advantage " "the Rust compiler provides by confirming when all cases are handled." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/destructuring.md msgid "" "Save the result of `divide_in_two` in the `result` variable and `match` it " "in a loop. That won't compile because `msg` is consumed when matched. To fix " "it, match `&result` instead of `result`. That will make `msg` a reference so " "it won't be consumed. This [\"match ergonomics\"](https://rust-lang.github." "io/rfcs/2005-match-ergonomics.html) appeared in Rust 2018. If you want to " "support older Rust, replace `msg` with `ref msg` in the pattern." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "Rust has a few control flow constructs which differ from other languages. " "They are used for pattern matching:" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "`if let` expressions" msgstr "Выражение `if let`" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "`while let` expressions" msgstr "Выражение `if let`" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "`match` expressions" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "The [`if let` expression](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/if-" "expr.html#if-let-expressions) lets you execute different code depending on " "whether a value matches a pattern:" msgstr "" "[Выражение `if let`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/if-expr." "html#if-let-expressions) позволяет выполнять разные ветки кода в зависимости " "от того, соответствует ли какое-либо значение шаблону или нет:" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "\"slept for {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "`let else` expressions" msgstr "Выражение `if let`" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "For the common case of matching a pattern and returning from the function, " "use [`let else`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/flow_control/" "let_else.html). The \"else\" case must diverge (`return`, `break`, or panic " "- anything but falling off the end of the block)." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "\"got None\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "\"got empty string\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "\"not a hex digit\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "\"result: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md src/generics/trait-bounds.md #: src/smart-pointers/solution.md src/testing/googletest.md #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"foo\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "Like with `if let`, there is a [`while let`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "reference/expressions/loop-expr.html#predicate-pattern-loops) variant which " "repeatedly tests a value against a pattern:" msgstr "" "Аналогично выражению `if let` существует [выражение`while let`](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/loop-expr.html#predicate-pattern-" "loops),\n" "которое в цикле проверяет сопоставление какого-либо выражения шаблону:" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Here [`String::pop`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/string/struct." "String.html#method.pop) returns `Some(c)` until the string is empty, after " "which it will return `None`. The `while let` lets us keep iterating through " "all items." msgstr "" "Здесь `next()`-итератор, возвращённый выражением `v.into_iter()`, возвращает " "объект типа `Option`.\n" "Сначала будет возращаться `Some(x)` для каждого элемента вектора,\n" "после чего `next()` вернёт `None`. Выражение `while let` позволяет нам " "лаконично\n" "проитерировать все значения вектора." #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "if-let" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "Unlike `match`, `if let` does not have to cover all branches. This can make " "it more concise than `match`." msgstr "" "`if let` может быть более лаконично, чем `match`. Например, когда нужно " "проверить только один вариант. Выражение `match`, напротив, требует проверки " "всех вариантов." #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "A common usage is handling `Some` values when working with `Option`." msgstr "" "Типичным случаем использования является проверка на значение `Some` при " "работе с типом `Option`." #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "Unlike `match`, `if let` does not support guard clauses for pattern matching." msgstr "" "В отличие от выражения `match`, `if let` не позволяет использовать охранные " "выражения." #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "let-else" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "`if-let`s can pile up, as shown. The `let-else` construct supports " "flattening this nested code. Rewrite the awkward version for students, so " "they can see the transformation." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "The rewritten version is:" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "while-let" msgstr "Выражение `while let`" #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md msgid "" "Point out that the `while let` loop will keep going as long as the value " "matches the pattern." msgstr "" "Уточнить, что циклы `while let` будут продолжаться до тех пор, пока значение " "будет соответствовать шаблону." #: src/pattern-matching/let-control-flow.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "You could rewrite the `while let` loop as an infinite loop with an if " "statement that breaks when there is no value to unwrap for `name.pop()`. The " "`while let` provides syntactic sugar for the above scenario." msgstr "" "Этот цикл можно переписать как бесконечный цикл, который прерывается, когда " "результат `iter.next()` перестаёт соответствовать `Some(x)`. Выражение " "`while let` позволяет описать ту же самую логику более лаконично." #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "Let's write a simple recursive evaluator for arithmetic expressions." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "" "The `Box` type here is a smart pointer, and will be covered in detail later " "in the course. An expression can be \"boxed\" with `Box::new` as seen in the " "tests. To evaluate a boxed expression, use the deref operator (`*`) to " "\"unbox\" it: `eval(*boxed_expr)`." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "" "Some expressions cannot be evaluated and will return an error. The standard " "[`Result`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result." "html) type is an enum that represents either a successful value " "(`Ok(Value)`) or an error (`Err(String)`). We will cover this type in detail " "later." msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "" "Copy and paste the code into the Rust playground, and begin implementing " "`eval`. The final product should pass the tests. It may be helpful to use " "`todo!()` and get the tests to pass one-by-one. You can also skip a test " "temporarily with `#[ignore]`:" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md msgid "" "If you finish early, try writing a test that results in division by zero or " "integer overflow. How could you handle this with `Result` instead of a panic?" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "/// An operation to perform on two subexpressions.\n" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "/// An expression, in tree form.\n" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "/// An operation on two subexpressions.\n" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "/// A literal value\n" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/exercise.md src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "\"division by zero\"" msgstr "" #: src/pattern-matching/solution.md msgid "\"expr: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "[Methods](./methods-and-traits/methods.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "[Traits](./methods-and-traits/traits.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "[Deriving](./methods-and-traits/deriving.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "[Trait Objects](./methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Generic Logger](./methods-and-traits/exercise.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits.md msgid "This segment should take about 55 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Rust allows you to associate functions with your new types. You do this with " "an `impl` block:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "// No receiver, a static method\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "// Exclusive borrowed read-write access to self\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "// Shared and read-only borrowed access to self\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "\"Recorded {} laps for {}:\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "\"Lap {idx}: {lap} sec\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "// Exclusive ownership of self\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "\"Race {} is finished, total lap time: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "\"Monaco Grand Prix\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "// race.add_lap(42);\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "The `self` arguments specify the \"receiver\" - the object the method acts " "on. There are several common receivers for a method:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "`&self`: borrows the object from the caller using a shared and immutable " "reference. The object can be used again afterwards." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "`&mut self`: borrows the object from the caller using a unique and mutable " "reference. The object can be used again afterwards." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "`self`: takes ownership of the object and moves it away from the caller. The " "method becomes the owner of the object. The object will be dropped " "(deallocated) when the method returns, unless its ownership is explicitly " "transmitted. Complete ownership does not automatically mean mutability." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "`mut self`: same as above, but the method can mutate the object." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "No receiver: this becomes a static method on the struct. Typically used to " "create constructors which are called `new` by convention." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "It can be helpful to introduce methods by comparing them to functions." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Methods are called on an instance of a type (such as a struct or enum), the " "first parameter represents the instance as `self`." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Developers may choose to use methods to take advantage of method receiver " "syntax and to help keep them more organized. By using methods we can keep " "all the implementation code in one predictable place." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "Point out the use of the keyword `self`, a method receiver." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Show that it is an abbreviated term for `self: Self` and perhaps show how " "the struct name could also be used." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Explain that `Self` is a type alias for the type the `impl` block is in and " "can be used elsewhere in the block." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Note how `self` is used like other structs and dot notation can be used to " "refer to individual fields." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "This might be a good time to demonstrate how the `&self` differs from `self` " "by trying to run `finish` twice." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/methods.md msgid "" "Beyond variants on `self`, there are also [special wrapper types](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/reference/special-types-and-traits.html) allowed to be " "receiver types, such as `Box`." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "" "Rust lets you abstract over types with traits. They're similar to interfaces:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "\"Oh you're a cutie! What's your name? {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "\"Woof, my name is {}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "\"Miau!\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "\"Fido\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "" "A trait defines a number of methods that types must have in order to " "implement the trait." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "Traits are implemented in an `impl for { .. }` block." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/traits.md msgid "" "Traits may specify pre-implemented (provided) methods and methods that users " "are required to implement themselves. Provided methods can rely on required " "methods. In this case, `greet` is provided, and relies on `talk`." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "" "Supported traits can be automatically implemented for your custom types, as " "follows:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "// Default trait adds `default` constructor.\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "// Clone trait adds `clone` method.\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "\"EldurScrollz\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "// Debug trait adds support for printing with `{:?}`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "\"{:?} vs. {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/deriving.md msgid "" "Derivation is implemented with macros, and many crates provide useful derive " "macros to add useful functionality. For example, `serde` can derive " "serialization support for a struct using `#[derive(Serialize)]`." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "Trait objects allow for values of different types, for instance in a " "collection:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "\"Hello, who are you? {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "Memory layout after allocating `pets`:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "```bob\n" " Stack Heap\n" ".- - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "- -.\n" ": : : :\n" ": pets : : +----+----+----+----" "+ :\n" ": +-----------+-------+ : : +-----+-----+ .->| F | i | d | o " "| :\n" ": | ptr | o---+---+-----+-->| o o | o o | | +----+----+----+----" "+ :\n" ": | len | 2 | : : +-|-|-+-|-|-+ " "`---------. :\n" ": | capacity | 2 | : : | | | | data " "| :\n" ": +-----------+-------+ : : | | | | +-------+--|-------" "+ :\n" ": : : | | | '-->| name | o, 4, 4 " "| :\n" ": : : | | | | age | 5 " "| :\n" "`- - - - - - - - - - - - - -' : | | | +-------+----------" "+ :\n" " : | | " "| :\n" " : | | | " "vtable :\n" " : | | | +----------------------" "+ :\n" " : | | '---->| \"::talk\" " "| :\n" " : | | +----------------------" "+ :\n" " : | " "| :\n" " : | | " "data :\n" " : | | +-------+-------" "+ :\n" " : | '-->| lives | 9 " "| :\n" " : | +-------+-------" "+ :\n" " : " "| :\n" " : | " "vtable :\n" " : | +----------------------" "+ :\n" " : '---->| \"::talk\" " "| :\n" " : +----------------------" "+ :\n" " : :\n" " '- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "- -'\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "Types that implement a given trait may be of different sizes. This makes it " "impossible to have things like `Vec` in the example above." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "`dyn Pet` is a way to tell the compiler about a dynamically sized type that " "implements `Pet`." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "In the example, `pets` is allocated on the stack and the vector data is on " "the heap. The two vector elements are _fat pointers_:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "A fat pointer is a double-width pointer. It has two components: a pointer to " "the actual object and a pointer to the [virtual method table](https://en." "wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_method_table) (vtable) for the `Pet` " "implementation of that particular object." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "" "The data for the `Dog` named Fido is the `name` and `age` fields. The `Cat` " "has a `lives` field." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md msgid "Compare these outputs in the above example:" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"{} {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/trait-objects.md src/std-traits/exercise.md #: src/std-traits/solution.md src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md #: src/android/build-rules/library.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "\"{}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md msgid "" "Let's design a simple logging utility, using a trait `Logger` with a `log` " "method. Code which might log its progress can then take an `&impl Logger`. " "In testing, this might put messages in the test logfile, while in a " "production build it would send messages to a log server." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md msgid "" "However, the `StderrLogger` given below logs all messages, regardless of " "verbosity. Your task is to write a `VerbosityFilter` type that will ignore " "messages above a maximum verbosity." msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md msgid "" "This is a common pattern: a struct wrapping a trait implementation and " "implementing that same trait, adding behavior in the process. What other " "kinds of wrappers might be useful in a logging utility?" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md src/methods-and-traits/solution.md msgid "/// Log a message at the given verbosity level.\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md src/methods-and-traits/solution.md msgid "\"verbosity={verbosity}: {message}\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md src/methods-and-traits/solution.md msgid "\"FYI\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md src/methods-and-traits/solution.md msgid "\"Uhoh\"" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/exercise.md msgid "// TODO: Define and implement `VerbosityFilter`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/methods-and-traits/solution.md msgid "/// Only log messages up to the given verbosity level.\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md msgid "[Generic Functions](./generics/generic-functions.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md msgid "[Generic Data Types](./generics/generic-data.md) (15 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md msgid "[Trait Bounds](./generics/trait-bounds.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md msgid "[impl Trait](./generics/impl-trait.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md msgid "[Exercise: Generic min](./generics/exercise.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/generics.md src/smart-pointers.md src/iterators.md src/error-handling.md msgid "This segment should take about 45 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "" "Rust supports generics, which lets you abstract algorithms or data " "structures (such as sorting or a binary tree) over the types used or stored." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "/// Pick `even` or `odd` depending on the value of `n`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "\"picked a number: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "\"picked a tuple: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "\"dog\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "\"cat\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "" "Rust infers a type for T based on the types of the arguments and return " "value." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "" "This is similar to C++ templates, but Rust partially compiles the generic " "function immediately, so that function must be valid for all types matching " "the constraints. For example, try modifying `pick` to return `even + odd` if " "`n == 0`. Even if only the `pick` instantiation with integers is used, Rust " "still considers it invalid. C++ would let you do this." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-functions.md msgid "" "Generic code is turned into non-generic code based on the call sites. This " "is a zero-cost abstraction: you get exactly the same result as if you had " "hand-coded the data structures without the abstraction." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "You can use generics to abstract over the concrete field type:" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "// fn set_x(&mut self, x: T)\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "\"{integer:?} and {float:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "\"coords: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "" "_Q:_ Why `T` is specified twice in `impl Point {}`? Isn't that " "redundant?" msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "" "This is because it is a generic implementation section for generic type. " "They are independently generic." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "It means these methods are defined for any `T`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "It is possible to write `impl Point { .. }`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "" "`Point` is still generic and you can use `Point`, but methods in this " "block will only be available for `Point`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/generic-data.md msgid "" "Try declaring a new variable `let p = Point { x: 5, y: 10.0 };`. Update the " "code to allow points that have elements of different types, by using two " "type variables, e.g., `T` and `U`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "" "When working with generics, you often want to require the types to implement " "some trait, so that you can call this trait's methods." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "You can do this with `T: Trait` or `impl Trait`:" msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "// struct NotClonable;\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "\"{pair:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "Try making a `NonClonable` and passing it to `duplicate`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "When multiple traits are necessary, use `+` to join them." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "Show a `where` clause, students will encounter it when reading code." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "It declutters the function signature if you have many parameters." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "It has additional features making it more powerful." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "" "If someone asks, the extra feature is that the type on the left of \":\" can " "be arbitrary, like `Option`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/trait-bounds.md msgid "" "Note that Rust does not (yet) support specialization. For example, given the " "original `duplicate`, it is invalid to add a specialized `duplicate(a: u32)`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "Similar to trait bounds, an `impl Trait` syntax can be used in function " "arguments and return values:" msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "// Syntactic sugar for:\n" "// fn add_42_millions>(x: T) -> i32 {\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "\"{many}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "\"{many_more}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "\"debuggable: {debuggable:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "`impl Trait` allows you to work with types which you cannot name. The " "meaning of `impl Trait` is a bit different in the different positions." msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "For a parameter, `impl Trait` is like an anonymous generic parameter with a " "trait bound." msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "For a return type, it means that the return type is some concrete type that " "implements the trait, without naming the type. This can be useful when you " "don't want to expose the concrete type in a public API." msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "Inference is hard in return position. A function returning `impl Foo` picks " "the concrete type it returns, without writing it out in the source. A " "function returning a generic type like `collect() -> B` can return any " "type satisfying `B`, and the caller may need to choose one, such as with " "`let x: Vec<_> = foo.collect()` or with the turbofish, `foo.collect::" ">()`." msgstr "" #: src/generics/impl-trait.md msgid "" "What is the type of `debuggable`? Try `let debuggable: () = ..` to see what " "the error message shows." msgstr "" #: src/generics/exercise.md msgid "" "In this short exercise, you will implement a generic `min` function that " "determines the minimum of two values, using a `LessThan` trait." msgstr "" #: src/generics/exercise.md src/generics/solution.md msgid "/// Return true if self is less than other.\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/exercise.md msgid "// TODO: implement the `min` function used in `main`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/generics/exercise.md src/generics/solution.md msgid "\"Shapiro\"" msgstr "" #: src/generics/exercise.md src/generics/solution.md msgid "\"Baumann\"" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2-afternoon.md msgid "[Standard Library Types](./std-types.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-2-afternoon.md msgid "[Standard Library Traits](./std-traits.md) (1 hour and 40 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Standard Library](./std-types/std.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Documentation](./std-types/docs.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Option](./std-types/option.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Result](./std-types/result.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[String](./std-types/string.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Vec](./std-types/vec.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[HashMap](./std-types/hashmap.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "[Exercise: Counter](./std-types/exercise.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md src/memory-management.md src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "This segment should take about 1 hour and 10 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/std-types.md msgid "" "For each of the slides in this section, spend some time reviewing the " "documentation pages, highlighting some of the more common methods." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/std.md msgid "" "Rust comes with a standard library which helps establish a set of common " "types used by Rust libraries and programs. This way, two libraries can work " "together smoothly because they both use the same `String` type." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/std.md msgid "" "In fact, Rust contains several layers of the Standard Library: `core`, " "`alloc` and `std`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/std.md msgid "" "`core` includes the most basic types and functions that don't depend on " "`libc`, allocator or even the presence of an operating system." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/std.md msgid "" "`alloc` includes types which require a global heap allocator, such as `Vec`, " "`Box` and `Arc`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/std.md msgid "" "Embedded Rust applications often only use `core`, and sometimes `alloc`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "Rust comes with extensive documentation. For example:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "All of the details about [loops](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/reference/" "expressions/loop-expr.html)." msgstr "" "[workspaces](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html)" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "Primitive types like [`u8`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive." "u8.html)." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "Standard library types like [`Option`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/" "option/enum.Option.html) or [`BinaryHeap`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/" "std/collections/struct.BinaryHeap.html)." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "In fact, you can document your own code:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "/// Determine whether the first argument is divisible by the second " "argument.\n" "///\n" "/// If the second argument is zero, the result is false.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "The contents are treated as Markdown. All published Rust library crates are " "automatically documented at [`docs.rs`](https://docs.rs) using the [rustdoc]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustdoc/what-is-rustdoc.html) tool. It is " "idiomatic to document all public items in an API using this pattern." msgstr "" "Содержимое интерпретируется как Markdown. Все опубликованные крейты " "библиотек Rust автоматически документируются на [`docs.rs`](https://docs.rs) " "с помощью инструмента [rustdoc](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustdoc/what-is-" "rustdoc.html). Документирование всех общедоступных элементов API используя " "этот подход является идиоматичным." #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "To document an item from inside the item (such as inside a module), use `//!" "` or `/*! .. */`, called \"inner doc comments\":" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md msgid "" "//! This module contains functionality relating to divisibility of " "integers.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/docs.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Show students the generated docs for the `rand` crate at ." msgstr "" "Покажите стедентам сгенерированную документацию для крейта `rand` в [`docs." "rs/rand`](https://docs.rs/rand) ." #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "Option" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "" "We have already seen some use of `Option`. It stores either a value of " "type `T` or nothing. For example, [`String::find`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "stable/std/string/struct.String.html#method.find) returns an `Option`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "\"Löwe 老虎 Léopard Gepardi\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "'é'" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "\"find returned {position:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "'Z'" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "\"Character not found\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "`Option` is widely used, not just in the standard library." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "" "`unwrap` will return the value in an `Option`, or panic. `expect` is similar " "but takes an error message." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "" "You can panic on None, but you can't \"accidentally\" forget to check for " "None." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "" "It's common to `unwrap`/`expect` all over the place when hacking something " "together, but production code typically handles `None` in a nicer fashion." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/option.md msgid "" "The niche optimization means that `Option` often has the same size in " "memory as `T`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "Result" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "" "`Result` is similar to `Option`, but indicates the success or failure of an " "operation, each with a different type. This is similar to the `Res` defined " "in the expression exercise, but generic: `Result` where `T` is used in " "the `Ok` variant and `E` appears in the `Err` variant." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "\"diary.txt\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "\"Dear diary: {contents} ({bytes} bytes)\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "\"Could not read file content\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "\"The diary could not be opened: {err}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "" "As with `Option`, the successful value sits inside of `Result`, forcing the " "developer to explicitly extract it. This encourages error checking. In the " "case where an error should never happen, `unwrap()` or `expect()` can be " "called, and this is a signal of the developer intent too." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "" "`Result` documentation is a recommended read. Not during the course, but it " "is worth mentioning. It contains a lot of convenience methods and functions " "that help functional-style programming." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/result.md msgid "" "`Result` is the standard type to implement error handling as we will see on " "Day 3." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "String" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "[`String`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html) is the " "standard heap-allocated growable UTF-8 string buffer:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md src/std-traits/read-and-write.md #: src/memory-management/review.md src/testing/unit-tests.md #: src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "\"Hello\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "\"s1: len = {}, capacity = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "'!'" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "\"s2: len = {}, capacity = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "\"🇨🇭\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "\"s3: len = {}, number of chars = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String` implements [`Deref`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" "string/struct.String.html#deref-methods-str), which means that you can call " "all `str` methods on a `String`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String::new` returns a new empty string, use `String::with_capacity` when " "you know how much data you want to push to the string." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String::len` returns the size of the `String` in bytes (which can be " "different from its length in characters)." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String::chars` returns an iterator over the actual characters. Note that a " "`char` can be different from what a human will consider a \"character\" due " "to [grapheme clusters](https://docs.rs/unicode-segmentation/latest/" "unicode_segmentation/struct.Graphemes.html)." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "When people refer to strings they could either be talking about `&str` or " "`String`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "When a type implements `Deref`, the compiler will let you " "transparently call methods from `T`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "We haven't discussed the `Deref` trait yet, so at this point this mostly " "explains the structure of the sidebar in the documentation." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String` implements `Deref` which transparently gives it " "access to `str`'s methods." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "Write and compare `let s3 = s1.deref();` and `let s3 = &*s1;`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "`String` is implemented as a wrapper around a vector of bytes, many of the " "operations you see supported on vectors are also supported on `String`, but " "with some extra guarantees." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "Compare the different ways to index a `String`:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "To a character by using `s3.chars().nth(i).unwrap()` where `i` is in-bound, " "out-of-bounds." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/string.md msgid "" "To a substring by using `s3[0..4]`, where that slice is on character " "boundaries or not." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "[`Vec`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/vec/struct.Vec.html) is the standard " "resizable heap-allocated buffer:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "\"v1: len = {}, capacity = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "\"v2: len = {}, capacity = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "// Canonical macro to initialize a vector with elements.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "// Retain only the even elements.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "\"{v3:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "// Remove consecutive duplicates.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "`Vec` implements [`Deref`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/vec/" "struct.Vec.html#deref-methods-%5BT%5D), which means that you can call slice " "methods on a `Vec`." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "`Vec` is a type of collection, along with `String` and `HashMap`. The data " "it contains is stored on the heap. This means the amount of data doesn't " "need to be known at compile time. It can grow or shrink at runtime." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "Notice how `Vec` is a generic type too, but you don't have to specify `T` " "explicitly. As always with Rust type inference, the `T` was established " "during the first `push` call." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "`vec![...]` is a canonical macro to use instead of `Vec::new()` and it " "supports adding initial elements to the vector." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "To index the vector you use `[` `]`, but they will panic if out of bounds. " "Alternatively, using `get` will return an `Option`. The `pop` function will " "remove the last element." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/vec.md msgid "" "Slices are covered on day 3. For now, students only need to know that a " "value of type `Vec` gives access to all of the documented slice methods, too." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "Standard hash map with protection against HashDoS attacks:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Grimms' Fairy Tales\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Pride and Prejudice\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Les Misérables\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"We know about {} books, but not Les Misérables.\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Alice's Adventure in Wonderland\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"{book}: {count} pages\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"{book} is unknown.\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "// Use the .entry() method to insert a value if nothing is found.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"{page_counts:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "`HashMap` is not defined in the prelude and needs to be brought into scope." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "Try the following lines of code. The first line will see if a book is in the " "hashmap and if not return an alternative value. The second line will insert " "the alternative value in the hashmap if the book is not found." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "\"The Hunger Games\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "Unlike `vec!`, there is unfortunately no standard `hashmap!` macro." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "Although, since Rust 1.56, HashMap implements [`From<[(K, V); N]>`](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/hash_map/struct.HashMap.html#impl-" "From%3C%5B(K,+V);+N%5D%3E-for-HashMap%3CK,+V,+RandomState%3E), which allows " "us to easily initialize a hash map from a literal array:" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "Alternatively HashMap can be built from any `Iterator` which yields key-" "value tuples." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "We are showing `HashMap`, and avoid using `&str` as key to make " "examples easier. Using references in collections can, of course, be done, " "but it can lead into complications with the borrow checker." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "Try removing `to_string()` from the example above and see if it still " "compiles. Where do you think we might run into issues?" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/hashmap.md msgid "" "This type has several \"method-specific\" return types, such as `std::" "collections::hash_map::Keys`. These types often appear in searches of the " "Rust docs. Show students the docs for this type, and the helpful link back " "to the `keys` method." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md msgid "" "In this exercise you will take a very simple data structure and make it " "generic. It uses a [`std::collections::HashMap`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "stable/std/collections/struct.HashMap.html) to keep track of which values " "have been seen and how many times each one has appeared." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md msgid "" "The initial version of `Counter` is hard coded to only work for `u32` " "values. Make the struct and its methods generic over the type of value being " "tracked, that way `Counter` can track any type of value." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md msgid "" "If you finish early, try using the [`entry`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "stable/std/collections/struct.HashMap.html#method.entry) method to halve the " "number of hash lookups required to implement the `count` method." msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "" "/// Counter counts the number of times each value of type T has been seen.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "/// Create a new Counter.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "/// Count an occurrence of the given value.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "/// Return the number of times the given value has been seen.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "\"saw {} values equal to {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "\"apple\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "\"orange\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-types/exercise.md src/std-types/solution.md msgid "\"got {} apples\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Comparisons](./std-traits/comparisons.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Operators](./std-traits/operators.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[From and Into](./std-traits/from-and-into.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Casting](./std-traits/casting.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Read and Write](./std-traits/read-and-write.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Default, struct update syntax](./std-traits/default.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Closures](./std-traits/closures.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "[Exercise: ROT13](./std-traits/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "This segment should take about 1 hour and 40 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "" "As with the standard-library types, spend time reviewing the documentation " "for each trait." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits.md msgid "This section is long. Take a break midway through." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "These traits support comparisons between values. All traits can be derived " "for types containing fields that implement these traits." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "`PartialEq` and `Eq`" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "`PartialEq` is a partial equivalence relation, with required method `eq` and " "provided method `ne`. The `==` and `!=` operators will call these methods." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "`Eq` is a full equivalence relation (reflexive, symmetric, and transitive) " "and implies `PartialEq`. Functions that require full equivalence will use " "`Eq` as a trait bound." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "`PartialOrd` and `Ord`" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "`PartialOrd` defines a partial ordering, with a `partial_cmp` method. It is " "used to implement the `<`, `<=`, `>=`, and `>` operators." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "`Ord` is a total ordering, with `cmp` returning `Ordering`." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "`PartialEq` can be implemented between different types, but `Eq` cannot, " "because it is reflexive:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/comparisons.md msgid "" "In practice, it's common to derive these traits, but uncommon to implement " "them." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "Operator overloading is implemented via traits in [`std::ops`](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/std/ops/index.html):" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "\"{:?} + {:?} = {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "Discussion points:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "You could implement `Add` for `&Point`. In which situations is that useful?" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "Answer: `Add:add` consumes `self`. If type `T` for which you are overloading " "the operator is not `Copy`, you should consider overloading the operator for " "`&T` as well. This avoids unnecessary cloning on the call site." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "Why is `Output` an associated type? Could it be made a type parameter of the " "method?" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "Short answer: Function type parameters are controlled by the caller, but " "associated types (like `Output`) are controlled by the implementer of a " "trait." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/operators.md msgid "" "You could implement `Add` for two different types, e.g. `impl Add<(i32, " "i32)> for Point` would add a tuple to a `Point`." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "" "Types implement [`From`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.From." "html) and [`Into`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.Into.html) to " "facilitate type conversions:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "\"{s}, {addr}, {one}, {bigger}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "" "[`Into`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.Into.html) is " "automatically implemented when [`From`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" "convert/trait.From.html) is implemented:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "" "That's why it is common to only implement `From`, as your type will get " "`Into` implementation too." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/from-and-into.md msgid "" "When declaring a function argument input type like \"anything that can be " "converted into a `String`\", the rule is opposite, you should use `Into`. " "Your function will accept types that implement `From` and those that _only_ " "implement `Into`." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "" "Rust has no _implicit_ type conversions, but does support explicit casts " "with `as`. These generally follow C semantics where those are defined." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "\"as u16: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "\"as i16: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "\"as u8: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "" "The results of `as` are _always_ defined in Rust and consistent across " "platforms. This might not match your intuition for changing sign or casting " "to a smaller type -- check the docs, and comment for clarity." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "" "Casting with `as` is a relatively sharp tool that is easy to use " "incorrectly, and can be a source of subtle bugs as future maintenance work " "changes the types that are used or the ranges of values in types. Casts are " "best used only when the intent is to indicate unconditional truncation (e.g. " "selecting the bottom 32 bits of a `u64` with `as u32`, regardless of what " "was in the high bits)." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "" "For infallible casts (e.g. `u32` to `u64`), prefer using `From` or `Into` " "over `as` to confirm that the cast is in fact infallible. For fallible " "casts, `TryFrom` and `TryInto` are available when you want to handle casts " "that fit differently from those that don't." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "Consider taking a break after this slide." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "" "`as` is similar to a C++ static cast. Use of `as` in cases where data might " "be lost is generally discouraged, or at least deserves an explanatory " "comment." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/casting.md msgid "This is common in casting integers to `usize` for use as an index." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "" "Using [`Read`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Read.html) and " "[`BufRead`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.BufRead.html), you can " "abstract over `u8` sources:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "b\"foo\\nbar\\nbaz\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "\"lines in slice: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "\"lines in file: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "" "Similarly, [`Write`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html) lets " "you abstract over `u8` sinks:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "\"\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "\"World\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/read-and-write.md msgid "\"Logged: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "The `Default` Trait" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "[`Default`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/default/trait.Default.html) trait " "produces a default value for a type." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "\"John Smith\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "\"{default_struct:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "\"Y is set!\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "\"{almost_default_struct:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"{:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "It can be implemented directly or it can be derived via `#[derive(Default)]`." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "A derived implementation will produce a value where all fields are set to " "their default values." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "This means all types in the struct must implement `Default` too." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "Standard Rust types often implement `Default` with reasonable values (e.g. " "`0`, `\"\"`, etc)." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "The partial struct initialization works nicely with default." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "The Rust standard library is aware that types can implement `Default` and " "provides convenience methods that use it." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/default.md msgid "" "The `..` syntax is called [struct update syntax](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "book/ch05-01-defining-structs.html#creating-instances-from-other-instances-" "with-struct-update-syntax)." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "Closures or lambda expressions have types which cannot be named. However, " "they implement special [`Fn`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.Fn." "html), [`FnMut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.FnMut.html), and " "[`FnOnce`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.FnOnce.html) traits:" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"Calling function on {input}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"add_3: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"accumulate: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"multiply_sum: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "An `Fn` (e.g. `add_3`) neither consumes nor mutates captured values, or " "perhaps captures nothing at all. It can be called multiple times " "concurrently." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "An `FnMut` (e.g. `accumulate`) might mutate captured values. You can call it " "multiple times, but not concurrently." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "If you have an `FnOnce` (e.g. `multiply_sum`), you may only call it once. It " "might consume captured values." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "`FnMut` is a subtype of `FnOnce`. `Fn` is a subtype of `FnMut` and `FnOnce`. " "I.e. you can use an `FnMut` wherever an `FnOnce` is called for, and you can " "use an `Fn` wherever an `FnMut` or `FnOnce` is called for." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "When you define a function that takes a closure, you should take `FnOnce` if " "you can (i.e. you call it once), or `FnMut` else, and last `Fn`. This allows " "the most flexibility for the caller." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "In contrast, when you have a closure, the most flexible you can have is `Fn` " "(it can be passed everywhere), then `FnMut`, and lastly `FnOnce`." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "The compiler also infers `Copy` (e.g. for `add_3`) and `Clone` (e.g. " "`multiply_sum`), depending on what the closure captures." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "" "By default, closures will capture by reference if they can. The `move` " "keyword makes them capture by value." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"Hi\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/closures.md msgid "\"there\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/exercise.md msgid "" "In this example, you will implement the classic [\"ROT13\" cipher](https://" "en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROT13). Copy this code to the playground, and " "implement the missing bits. Only rotate ASCII alphabetic characters, to " "ensure the result is still valid UTF-8." msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/exercise.md msgid "// Implement the `Read` trait for `RotDecoder`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/exercise.md src/std-traits/solution.md msgid "\"Gb trg gb gur bgure fvqr!\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/exercise.md src/std-traits/solution.md msgid "\"To get to the other side!\"" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/exercise.md msgid "" "What happens if you chain two `RotDecoder` instances together, each rotating " "by 13 characters?" msgstr "" #: src/std-traits/solution.md msgid "'A'" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "Welcome to Day 3" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "Today, we will cover:" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "" "Memory management, lifetimes, and the borrow checker: how Rust ensures " "memory safety." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "Smart pointers: standard library pointer types." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "[Welcome](./welcome-day-3.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "[Memory Management](./memory-management.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "[Smart Pointers](./smart-pointers.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3.md msgid "" "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 2 hours and 15 " "minutes" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Review of Program Memory](./memory-management/review.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "" "[Approaches to Memory Management](./memory-management/approaches.md) (10 " "minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Ownership](./memory-management/ownership.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Move Semantics](./memory-management/move.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Clone](./memory-management/clone.md) (2 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Copy Types](./memory-management/copy-types.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Drop](./memory-management/drop.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management.md msgid "[Exercise: Builder Type](./memory-management/exercise.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Programs allocate memory in two ways:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Stack: Continuous area of memory for local variables." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Values have fixed sizes known at compile time." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Extremely fast: just move a stack pointer." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Easy to manage: follows function calls." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Great memory locality." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Heap: Storage of values outside of function calls." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Values have dynamic sizes determined at runtime." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "Slightly slower than the stack: some book-keeping needed." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "No guarantee of memory locality." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "" "Creating a `String` puts fixed-sized metadata on the stack and dynamically " "sized data, the actual string, on the heap:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "" "Mention that a `String` is backed by a `Vec`, so it has a capacity and " "length and can grow if mutable via reallocation on the heap." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "" "If students ask about it, you can mention that the underlying memory is heap " "allocated using the [System Allocator](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/alloc/" "struct.System.html) and custom allocators can be implemented using the " "[Allocator API](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/alloc/index.html)" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "" "We can inspect the memory layout with `unsafe` Rust. However, you should " "point out that this is rightfully unsafe!" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "' '" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "\"world\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "" "// DON'T DO THIS AT HOME! For educational purposes only.\n" " // String provides no guarantees about its layout, so this could lead " "to\n" " // undefined behavior.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/review.md msgid "\"ptr = {ptr:#x}, len = {len}, capacity = {capacity}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Traditionally, languages have fallen into two broad categories:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Full control via manual memory management: C, C++, Pascal, ..." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Programmer decides when to allocate or free heap memory." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Programmer must determine whether a pointer still points to valid memory." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Studies show, programmers make mistakes." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Full safety via automatic memory management at runtime: Java, Python, Go, " "Haskell, ..." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "A runtime system ensures that memory is not freed until it can no longer be " "referenced." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Typically implemented with reference counting, garbage collection, or RAII." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "Rust offers a new mix:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Full control _and_ safety via compile time enforcement of correct memory " "management." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "It does this with an explicit ownership concept." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "This slide is intended to help students coming from other languages to put " "Rust in context." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "C must manage heap manually with `malloc` and `free`. Common errors include " "forgetting to call `free`, calling it multiple times for the same pointer, " "or dereferencing a pointer after the memory it points to has been freed." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "C++ has tools like smart pointers (`unique_ptr`, `shared_ptr`) that take " "advantage of language guarantees about calling destructors to ensure memory " "is freed when a function returns. It is still quite easy to mis-use these " "tools and create similar bugs to C." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Java, Go, and Python rely on the garbage collector to identify memory that " "is no longer reachable and discard it. This guarantees that any pointer can " "be dereferenced, eliminating use-after-free and other classes of bugs. But, " "GC has a runtime cost and is difficult to tune properly." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/approaches.md msgid "" "Rust's ownership and borrowing model can, in many cases, get the performance " "of C, with alloc and free operations precisely where they are required -- " "zero cost. It also provides tools similar to C++'s smart pointers. When " "required, other options such as reference counting are available, and there " "are even third-party crates available to support runtime garbage collection " "(not covered in this class)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/ownership.md msgid "" "All variable bindings have a _scope_ where they are valid and it is an error " "to use a variable outside its scope:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/ownership.md msgid "" "We say that the variable _owns_ the value. Every Rust value has precisely " "one owner at all times." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/ownership.md msgid "" "At the end of the scope, the variable is _dropped_ and the data is freed. A " "destructor can run here to free up resources." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/ownership.md msgid "" "Students familiar with garbage-collection implementations will know that a " "garbage collector starts with a set of \"roots\" to find all reachable " "memory. Rust's \"single owner\" principle is a similar idea." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "An assignment will transfer _ownership_ between variables:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Hello!\"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/memory-management/move.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "\"s2: {s2}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "// println!(\"s1: {s1}\");\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "The assignment of `s1` to `s2` transfers ownership." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "When `s1` goes out of scope, nothing happens: it does not own anything." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "When `s2` goes out of scope, the string data is freed." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "Before move to `s2`:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "After move to `s2`:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "```bob\n" " Stack Heap\n" ".- - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - -.\n" ": : : :\n" ": s1 \"(inaccessible)\" : : :\n" ": +-----------+-------+ : : +----+----+----+----+ :\n" ": | ptr | o---+---+--+--+-->| R | u | s | t | :\n" ": | len | 4 | : | : +----+----+----+----+ :\n" ": | capacity | 4 | : | : :\n" ": +-----------+-------+ : | : :\n" ": : | `- - - - - - - - - - - - - -'\n" ": s2 : |\n" ": +-----------+-------+ : |\n" ": | ptr | o---+---+--'\n" ": | len | 4 | :\n" ": | capacity | 4 | :\n" ": +-----------+-------+ :\n" ": :\n" "`- - - - - - - - - - - - - -'\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "When you pass a value to a function, the value is assigned to the function " "parameter. This transfers ownership:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "\"Hello {name}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md src/android/interoperability/java.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Alice\"" msgstr "Срезы" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "// say_hello(name);\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "Mention that this is the opposite of the defaults in C++, which copies by " "value unless you use `std::move` (and the move constructor is defined!)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "It is only the ownership that moves. Whether any machine code is generated " "to manipulate the data itself is a matter of optimization, and such copies " "are aggressively optimized away." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "Simple values (such as integers) can be marked `Copy` (see later slides)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "In Rust, clones are explicit (by using `clone`)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "In the `say_hello` example:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "With the first call to `say_hello`, `main` gives up ownership of `name`. " "Afterwards, `name` cannot be used anymore within `main`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "The heap memory allocated for `name` will be freed at the end of the " "`say_hello` function." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "`main` can retain ownership if it passes `name` as a reference (`&name`) and " "if `say_hello` accepts a reference as a parameter." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "Alternatively, `main` can pass a clone of `name` in the first call (`name." "clone()`)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "Rust makes it harder than C++ to inadvertently create copies by making move " "semantics the default, and by forcing programmers to make clones explicit." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "Defensive Copies in Modern C++" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "Modern C++ solves this differently:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "\"Cpp\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "// Duplicate the data in s1.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "The heap data from `s1` is duplicated and `s2` gets its own independent copy." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "When `s1` and `s2` go out of scope, they each free their own memory." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "Before copy-assignment:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "After copy-assignment:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "C++ has made a slightly different choice than Rust. Because `=` copies data, " "the string data has to be cloned. Otherwise we would get a double-free when " "either string goes out of scope." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "C++ also has [`std::move`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/move), " "which is used to indicate when a value may be moved from. If the example had " "been `s2 = std::move(s1)`, no heap allocation would take place. After the " "move, `s1` would be in a valid but unspecified state. Unlike Rust, the " "programmer is allowed to keep using `s1`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/move.md msgid "" "Unlike Rust, `=` in C++ can run arbitrary code as determined by the type " "which is being copied or moved." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/clone.md msgid "Clone" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/clone.md msgid "" "Sometimes you _want_ to make a copy of a value. The `Clone` trait " "accomplishes this." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/clone.md msgid "" "The idea of `Clone` is to make it easy to spot where heap allocations are " "occurring. Look for `.clone()` and a few others like `Vec::new` or `Box::" "new`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/clone.md msgid "" "It's common to \"clone your way out\" of problems with the borrow checker, " "and return later to try to optimize those clones away." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "While move semantics are the default, certain types are copied by default:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "These types implement the `Copy` trait." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "You can opt-in your own types to use copy semantics:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "After the assignment, both `p1` and `p2` own their own data." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "We can also use `p1.clone()` to explicitly copy the data." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "Copying and cloning are not the same thing:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "Copying refers to bitwise copies of memory regions and does not work on " "arbitrary objects." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "Copying does not allow for custom logic (unlike copy constructors in C++)." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "Cloning is a more general operation and also allows for custom behavior by " "implementing the `Clone` trait." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "Copying does not work on types that implement the `Drop` trait." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "In the above example, try the following:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "Add a `String` field to `struct Point`. It will not compile because `String` " "is not a `Copy` type." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "" "Remove `Copy` from the `derive` attribute. The compiler error is now in the " "`println!` for `p1`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/copy-types.md msgid "Show that it works if you clone `p1` instead." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "The `Drop` Trait" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "Values which implement [`Drop`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.Drop." "html) can specify code to run when they go out of scope:" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"Dropping {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"a\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md src/testing/googletest.md msgid "\"b\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"c\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"d\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"Exiting block B\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"Exiting block A\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "\"Exiting main\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "Note that `std::mem::drop` is not the same as `std::ops::Drop::drop`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "Values are automatically dropped when they go out of scope." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "When a value is dropped, if it implements `std::ops::Drop` then its `Drop::" "drop` implementation will be called." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "All its fields will then be dropped too, whether or not it implements `Drop`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "`std::mem::drop` is just an empty function that takes any value. The " "significance is that it takes ownership of the value, so at the end of its " "scope it gets dropped. This makes it a convenient way to explicitly drop " "values earlier than they would otherwise go out of scope." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "This can be useful for objects that do some work on `drop`: releasing locks, " "closing files, etc." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "Why doesn't `Drop::drop` take `self`?" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "" "Short-answer: If it did, `std::mem::drop` would be called at the end of the " "block, resulting in another call to `Drop::drop`, and a stack overflow!" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/drop.md msgid "Try replacing `drop(a)` with `a.drop()`." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "" "In this example, we will implement a complex data type that owns all of its " "data. We will use the \"builder pattern\" to support building a new value " "piece-by-piece, using convenience functions." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "Fill in the missing pieces." msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "/// A representation of a software package.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "" "/// Return a representation of this package as a dependency, for use in\n" " /// building other packages.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "\"1\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "" "/// A builder for a Package. Use `build()` to create the `Package` itself.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "\"2\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "/// Set the package version.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "/// Set the package authors.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "\"3\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "/// Add an additional dependency.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "\"4\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "/// Set the language. If not set, language defaults to None.\n" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md msgid "\"5\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"base64\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"0.13\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"base64: {base64:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"log\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"0.4\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"log: {log:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"serde\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"djmitche\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"4.0\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/exercise.md src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"serde: {serde:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/memory-management/solution.md msgid "\"0.1\"" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers.md msgid "[Box" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers.md msgid "](./smart-pointers/box.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers.md msgid "[Rc](./smart-pointers/rc.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers.md msgid "[Exercise: Binary Tree](./smart-pointers/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "[`Box`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/struct.Box.html) is an owned " "pointer to data on the heap:" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "\"five: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "`Box` implements `Deref`, which means that you can [call " "methods from `T` directly on a `Box`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/" "trait.Deref.html#more-on-deref-coercion)." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "Recursive data types or data types with dynamic sizes need to use a `Box`:" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "/// A non-empty list: first element and the rest of the list.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "/// An empty list.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "\"{list:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "```bob\n" " Stack Heap\n" ".- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "- - - - -.\n" ": : : :\n" ": " "list : : :\n" ": +---------+----+----+ : : +---------+----+----+ +------+----" "+----+ :\n" ": | Element | 1 | o--+----+-----+--->| Element | 2 | o--+--->| Nil | // " "| // | :\n" ": +---------+----+----+ : : +---------+----+----+ +------+----" "+----+ :\n" ": : : :\n" ": : : :\n" "'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' '- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "- - - - -'\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "`Box` is like `std::unique_ptr` in C++, except that it's guaranteed to be " "not null." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "A `Box` can be useful when you:" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "have a type whose size that can't be known at compile time, but the Rust " "compiler wants to know an exact size." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "want to transfer ownership of a large amount of data. To avoid copying large " "amounts of data on the stack, instead store the data on the heap in a `Box` " "so only the pointer is moved." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "If `Box` was not used and we attempted to embed a `List` directly into the " "`List`, the compiler would not compute a fixed size of the struct in memory " "(`List` would be of infinite size)." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "`Box` solves this problem as it has the same size as a regular pointer and " "just points at the next element of the `List` in the heap." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "Remove the `Box` in the List definition and show the compiler error. " "\"Recursive with indirection\" is a hint you might want to use a Box or " "reference of some kind, instead of storing a value directly." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "Niche Optimization" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "A `Box` cannot be empty, so the pointer is always valid and non-`null`. This " "allows the compiler to optimize the memory layout:" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/box.md msgid "" "```bob\n" " Stack Heap\n" ".- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - -.\n" ": : : :\n" ": list : : :\n" ": +---------+----+----+ : : +---------+----+----+ :\n" ": | Element | 1 | o--+----+-----+--->| Element | 2 | // | :\n" ": +---------+----+----+ : : +---------+----+----+ :\n" ": : : :\n" ": : : :\n" "'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' '- - - - - - - - - - - - - -'\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "[`Rc`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/rc/struct.Rc.html) is a reference-" "counted shared pointer. Use this when you need to refer to the same data " "from multiple places:" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "\"a: {a}\"" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "\"b: {b}\"" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "See [`Arc`](../concurrency/shared_state/arc.md) and [`Mutex`](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Mutex.html) if you are in a multi-threaded " "context." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "You can _downgrade_ a shared pointer into a [`Weak`](https://doc.rust-lang." "org/std/rc/struct.Weak.html) pointer to create cycles that will get dropped." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "`Rc`'s count ensures that its contained value is valid for as long as there " "are references." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "`Rc` in Rust is like `std::shared_ptr` in C++." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "`Rc::clone` is cheap: it creates a pointer to the same allocation and " "increases the reference count. Does not make a deep clone and can generally " "be ignored when looking for performance issues in code." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "`make_mut` actually clones the inner value if necessary (\"clone-on-write\") " "and returns a mutable reference." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "Use `Rc::strong_count` to check the reference count." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/rc.md msgid "" "`Rc::downgrade` gives you a _weakly reference-counted_ object to create " "cycles that will be dropped properly (likely in combination with `RefCell`)." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md msgid "" "A binary tree is a tree-type data structure where every node has two " "children (left and right). We will create a tree where each node stores a " "value. For a given node N, all nodes in a N's left subtree contain smaller " "values, and all nodes in N's right subtree will contain larger values." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md msgid "Implement the following types, so that the given tests pass." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md msgid "" "Extra Credit: implement an iterator over a binary tree that returns the " "values in order." msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md src/smart-pointers/solution.md msgid "/// A node in the binary tree.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md src/smart-pointers/solution.md msgid "/// A possibly-empty subtree.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md src/smart-pointers/solution.md msgid "" "/// A container storing a set of values, using a binary tree.\n" "///\n" "/// If the same value is added multiple times, it is only stored once.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md msgid "// Implement `new`, `insert`, `len`, and `has`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/exercise.md src/smart-pointers/solution.md msgid "// not a unique item\n" msgstr "" #: src/smart-pointers/solution.md src/testing/googletest.md msgid "\"bar\"" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3-afternoon.md msgid "[Borrowing](./borrowing.md) (1 hour)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3-afternoon.md msgid "" "[Slices and Lifetimes](./slices-and-lifetimes.md) (1 hour and 10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-3-afternoon.md msgid "" "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 2 hours and 20 " "minutes" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing.md msgid "[Borrowing a Value](./borrowing/shared.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing.md msgid "[Borrow Checking](./borrowing/borrowck.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing.md msgid "[Interior Mutability](./borrowing/interior-mutability.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing.md msgid "[Exercise: Health Statistics](./borrowing/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "" "As we saw before, instead of transferring ownership when calling a function, " "you can let a function _borrow_ the value:" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "The `add` function _borrows_ two points and returns a new point." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "The caller retains ownership of the inputs." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "" "This slide is a review of the material on references from day 1, expanding " "slightly to include function arguments and return values." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "Notes on stack returns:" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "" "Demonstrate that the return from `add` is cheap because the compiler can " "eliminate the copy operation. Change the above code to print stack addresses " "and run it on the [Playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?" "version=stable&mode=release&edition=2021&gist=0cb13be1c05d7e3446686ad9947c4671) " "or look at the assembly in [Godbolt](https://rust.godbolt.org/). In the " "\"DEBUG\" optimization level, the addresses should change, while they stay " "the same when changing to the \"RELEASE\" setting:" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "The Rust compiler can do return value optimization (RVO)." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/shared.md msgid "" "In C++, copy elision has to be defined in the language specification because " "constructors can have side effects. In Rust, this is not an issue at all. If " "RVO did not happen, Rust will always perform a simple and efficient `memcpy` " "copy." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "Rust's _borrow checker_ puts constraints on the ways you can borrow values. " "For a given value, at any time:" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "You can have one or more shared references to the value, _or_" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "You can have exactly one exclusive reference to the value." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "Note that the requirement is that conflicting references not _exist_ at the " "same point. It does not matter where the reference is dereferenced." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "The above code does not compile because `a` is borrowed as mutable (through " "`c`) and as immutable (through `b`) at the same time." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "Move the `println!` statement for `b` before the scope that introduces `c` " "to make the code compile." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "After that change, the compiler realizes that `b` is only ever used before " "the new mutable borrow of `a` through `c`. This is a feature of the borrow " "checker called \"non-lexical lifetimes\"." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "The exclusive reference constraint is quite strong. Rust uses it to ensure " "that data races do not occur. Rust also _relies_ on this constraint to " "optimize code. For example, a value behind a shared reference can be safely " "cached in a register for the lifetime of that reference." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/borrowck.md msgid "" "The borrow checker is designed to accommodate many common patterns, such as " "taking exclusive references to different fields in a struct at the same " "time. But, there are some situations where it doesn't quite \"get it\" and " "this often results in \"fighting with the borrow checker.\"" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "In some situations, it's necessary to modify data behind a shared (read-" "only) reference. For example, a shared data structure might have an internal " "cache, and wish to update that cache from read-only methods." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "The \"interior mutability\" pattern allows exclusive (mutable) access behind " "a shared reference. The standard library provides several ways to do this, " "all while still ensuring safety, typically by performing a runtime check." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "`RefCell`" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "\"graph: {root:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "\"graph sum: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "`Cell`" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "`Cell` wraps a value and allows getting or setting the value, even with a " "shared reference to the `Cell`. However, it does not allow any references to " "the value. Since there are no references, borrowing rules cannot be broken." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "The main thing to take away from this slide is that Rust provides _safe_ " "ways to modify data behind a shared reference. There are a variety of ways " "to ensure that safety, and `RefCell` and `Cell` are two of them." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "`RefCell` enforces Rust's usual borrowing rules (either multiple shared " "references or a single exclusive reference) with a runtime check. In this " "case, all borrows are very short and never overlap, so the checks always " "succeed." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "`Rc` only allows shared (read-only) access to its contents, since its " "purpose is to allow (and count) many references. But we want to modify the " "value, so we need interior mutability." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "`Cell` is a simpler means to ensure safety: it has a `set` method that takes " "`&self`. This needs no runtime check, but requires moving values, which can " "have its own cost." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "Demonstrate that reference loops can be created by adding `root` to `subtree." "children`." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/interior-mutability.md msgid "" "To demonstrate a runtime panic, add a `fn inc(&mut self)` that increments " "`self.value` and calls the same method on its children. This will panic in " "the presence of the reference loop, with `thread 'main' panicked at 'already " "borrowed: BorrowMutError'`." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md msgid "" "You're working on implementing a health-monitoring system. As part of that, " "you need to keep track of users' health statistics." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md msgid "" "You'll start with a stubbed function in an `impl` block as well as a `User` " "struct definition. Your goal is to implement the stubbed out method on the " "`User` `struct` defined in the `impl` block." msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Copy the code below to and fill in the missing " "method:" msgstr "" "Скопируйте приведенный ниже код в и реализуйте " "функции:" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md msgid "" "\"Update a user's statistics based on measurements from a visit to the " "doctor\"" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md src/borrowing/solution.md #: src/android/build-rules/library.md src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"Bob\"" msgstr "" #: src/borrowing/exercise.md src/borrowing/solution.md msgid "\"I'm {} and my age is {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "[Slices: &\\[T\\]](./slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "[String References](./slices-and-lifetimes/str.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "" "[Lifetime Annotations](./slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md) (10 " "minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "" "[Lifetime Elision](./slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "" "[Struct Lifetimes](./slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Protobuf Parsing](./slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "Slices" msgstr "Срезы" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "A slice gives you a view into a larger collection:" msgstr "" "Срезы позволяют ссылаться на непрерывную последовательность элементов в " "коллекции:" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "Slices borrow data from the sliced type." msgstr "Срезы заимствуют данные у коллекции." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md #, fuzzy msgid "Question: What happens if you modify `a[3]` right before printing `s`?" msgstr "Вопрос: Что произойдет, если вы измените значение в `a[3]`?" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "" "We create a slice by borrowing `a` and specifying the starting and ending " "indexes in brackets." msgstr "" "Мы создаем срез, заимствуя `a` и указывая начальный и конечный индексы в " "скобках." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "" "If the slice starts at index 0, Rust’s range syntax allows us to drop the " "starting index, meaning that `&a[0..a.len()]` and `&a[..a.len()]` are " "identical." msgstr "" "Если срез начинается с индекса 0, синтаксис Rust позволяет отбросить " "начальный индекс, таким образом, `&a[0..a.len()]` и `&a[..a.len()]` " "идентичны ." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "" "The same is true for the last index, so `&a[2..a.len()]` and `&a[2..]` are " "identical." msgstr "" "То же верно и для последнего индекса, поэтому `&a[2..a.len()]` и `&a[2..]` " "идентичны." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "" "To easily create a slice of the full array, we can therefore use `&a[..]`." msgstr "Чтобы создать срез всего массива, можно использовать `&a[..]`." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md msgid "" "`s` is a reference to a slice of `i32`s. Notice that the type of `s` " "(`&[i32]`) no longer mentions the array length. This allows us to perform " "computation on slices of different sizes." msgstr "" "`s` --- это ссылка на срез элементов типа `i32`. Обратите внимание, что тип " "`s` (`&[i32]`) больше не указывает длину массива. Это позволяет выполнять " "вычисления на срезах разных размеров." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Slices always borrow from another object. In this example, `a` has to remain " "'alive' (in scope) for at least as long as our slice." msgstr "" "Срезы всегда заимствуют у другого объекта. В этом примере `a` должен " "оставаться ‘живым’ (в области видимости) по крайней мере столько же, сколько " "и срез." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/slices.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The question about modifying `a[3]` can spark an interesting discussion, but " "the answer is that for memory safety reasons you cannot do it through `a` at " "this point in the execution, but you can read the data from both `a` and `s` " "safely. It works before you created the slice, and again after the " "`println`, when the slice is no longer used." msgstr "" "Вопрос об изменении `a[3]` может породить интересную дискуссию, но ответ " "заключается в том, что по соображениям безопасности памяти вы не можете " "сделать это через `a` после создания среза, но можете безопасно читать " "данные как из `a`, так и из `s`. Более подробная информация будет изложена в " "разделе анализатора заимствований." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "" "We can now understand the two string types in Rust: `&str` is almost like " "`&[char]`, but with its data stored in a variable-length encoding (UTF-8)." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "\"s1: {s1}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Hello \"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "\"s3: {s3}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "Rust terminology:" msgstr "Терминология Rust:" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "`&str` an immutable reference to a string slice." msgstr "`&str` --- неизменяемая ссылка на срез строки." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "`String` a mutable string buffer." msgstr "`String` --- изменяемый строковый буфер." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "`&str` introduces a string slice, which is an immutable reference to UTF-8 " "encoded string data stored in a block of memory. String literals " "(`”Hello”`), are stored in the program’s binary." msgstr "" "`&str` представляет срез строки, который является неизменяемой ссылкой на " "строковые данные в кодировке UTF-8, хранящиеся в памяти. Строковые литералы " "(`”Hello”`) хранятся в исполняемом файле программы." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "" "Rust’s `String` type is a wrapper around a vector of bytes. As with a " "`Vec`, it is owned." msgstr "Тип `String` в Rust --- это обертка вокруг вектора байтов." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "As with many other types `String::from()` creates a string from a string " "literal; `String::new()` creates a new empty string, to which string data " "can be added using the `push()` and `push_str()` methods." msgstr "" "Как и во многих других типах, `String::from()` создает строку из строкового " "литерала; `String::new()` создает новую пустую строку, в которую строковые " "данные могут быть добавлены с помощью методов `push()` и `push_str()`." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The `format!()` macro is a convenient way to generate an owned string from " "dynamic values. It accepts the same format specification as `println!()`." msgstr "" "Макрос `format!()` --- это удобный способ сгенерировать строку из " "динамических значений. Он принимает ту же строку формата, что и `println!()`." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md msgid "" "You can borrow `&str` slices from `String` via `&` and optionally range " "selection. If you select a byte range that is not aligned to character " "boundaries, the expression will panic. The `chars` iterator iterates over " "characters and is preferred over trying to get character boundaries right." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "For C++ programmers: think of `&str` as `std::string_view` from C++, but the " "one that always points to a valid string in memory. Rust `String` is a rough " "equivalent of `std::string` from C++ (main difference: it can only contain " "UTF-8 encoded bytes and will never use a small-string optimization)." msgstr "" "Для программистов на C++: думайте о `&str` как о `const char*` из C++, но " "таком, который всегда указывает на корректную строку в памяти. `String` в " "Rust --- это примерный эквивалент `std::string` из C++ (основное отличие: " "она может содержать только байты в кодировке UTF-8 и не будет использовать " "оптимизацию для небольших строк)." #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/str.md #, fuzzy msgid "Byte strings literals allow you to create a `&[u8]` value directly:" msgstr "Байтовые строки позволяют создать значение `&[u8]`:" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "A reference has a _lifetime_, which must not \"outlive\" the value it refers " "to. This is verified by the borrow checker." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "The lifetime can be implicit - this is what we have seen so far. Lifetimes " "can also be explicit: `&'a Point`, `&'document str`. Lifetimes start with " "`'` and `'a` is a typical default name. Read `&'a Point` as \"a borrowed " "`Point` which is valid for at least the lifetime `a`\"." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "Lifetimes are always inferred by the compiler: you cannot assign a lifetime " "yourself. Explicit lifetime annotations create constraints where there is " "ambiguity; the compiler verifies that there is a valid solution." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "Lifetimes become more complicated when considering passing values to and " "returning values from functions." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "// What is the lifetime of p3?\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "\"p3: {p3:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "In this example, the the compiler does not know what lifetime to infer for " "`p3`. Looking inside the function body shows that it can only safely assume " "that `p3`'s lifetime is the shorter of `p1` and `p2`. But just like types, " "Rust requires explicit annotations of lifetimes on function arguments and " "return values." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "Add `'a` appropriately to `left_most`:" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "This says, \"given p1 and p2 which both outlive `'a`, the return value lives " "for at least `'a`." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-annotations.md msgid "" "In common cases, lifetimes can be elided, as described on the next slide." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "Lifetimes in Function Calls" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "Lifetimes for function arguments and return values must be fully specified, " "but Rust allows lifetimes to be elided in most cases with [a few simple " "rules](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/lifetime-elision.html). This is not " "inference -- it is just a syntactic shorthand." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "Each argument which does not have a lifetime annotation is given one." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "If there is only one argument lifetime, it is given to all un-annotated " "return values." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "If there are multiple argument lifetimes, but the first one is for `self`, " "that lifetime is given to all un-annotated return values." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "In this example, `cab_distance` is trivially elided." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "The `nearest` function provides another example of a function with multiple " "references in its arguments that requires explicit annotation." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "Try adjusting the signature to \"lie\" about the lifetimes returned:" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "This won't compile, demonstrating that the annotations are checked for " "validity by the compiler. Note that this is not the case for raw pointers " "(unsafe), and this is a common source of errors with unsafe Rust." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/lifetime-elision.md msgid "" "Students may ask when to use lifetimes. Rust borrows _always_ have " "lifetimes. Most of the time, elision and type inference mean these don't " "need to be written out. In more complicated cases, lifetime annotations can " "help resolve ambiguity. Often, especially when prototyping, it's easier to " "just work with owned data by cloning values where necessary." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "Lifetimes in Data Structures" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "" "If a data type stores borrowed data, it must be annotated with a lifetime:" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "\"Bye {text}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "\"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "// erase(text);\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "\"{fox:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "\"{dog:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "" "In the above example, the annotation on `Highlight` enforces that the data " "underlying the contained `&str` lives at least as long as any instance of " "`Highlight` that uses that data." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "" "If `text` is consumed before the end of the lifetime of `fox` (or `dog`), " "the borrow checker throws an error." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "" "Types with borrowed data force users to hold on to the original data. This " "can be useful for creating lightweight views, but it generally makes them " "somewhat harder to use." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "When possible, make data structures own their data directly." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/struct-lifetimes.md msgid "" "Some structs with multiple references inside can have more than one lifetime " "annotation. This can be necessary if there is a need to describe lifetime " "relationships between the references themselves, in addition to the lifetime " "of the struct itself. Those are very advanced use cases." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "In this exercise, you will build a parser for the [protobuf binary encoding]" "(https://protobuf.dev/programming-guides/encoding/). Don't worry, it's " "simpler than it seems! This illustrates a common parsing pattern, passing " "slices of data. The underlying data itself is never copied." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "Fully parsing a protobuf message requires knowing the types of the fields, " "indexed by their field numbers. That is typically provided in a `proto` " "file. In this exercise, we'll encode that information into `match` " "statements in functions that get called for each field." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "We'll use the following proto:" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "A proto message is encoded as a series of fields, one after the next. Each " "is implemented as a \"tag\" followed by the value. The tag contains a field " "number (e.g., `2` for the `id` field of a `Person` message) and a wire type " "defining how the payload should be determined from the byte stream." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "Integers, including the tag, are represented with a variable-length encoding " "called VARINT. Luckily, `parse_varint` is defined for you below. The given " "code also defines callbacks to handle `Person` and `PhoneNumber` fields, and " "to parse a message into a series of calls to those callbacks." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "What remains for you is to implement the `parse_field` function and the " "`ProtoMessage` trait for `Person` and `PhoneNumber`." msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid varint\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid wire-type\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Unexpected EOF\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid length\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Unexpected wire-type)\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid string (not UTF-8)\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// A wire type as seen on the wire.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// The Varint WireType indicates the value is a single VARINT.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "" "//I64, -- not needed for this exercise\n" " /// The Len WireType indicates that the value is a length represented as " "a\n" " /// VARINT followed by exactly that number of bytes.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "" "/// The I32 WireType indicates that the value is precisely 4 bytes in\n" " /// little-endian order containing a 32-bit signed integer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// A field's value, typed based on the wire type.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "//I64(i64), -- not needed for this exercise\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// A field, containing the field number and its value.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "//1 => WireType::I64, -- not needed for this exercise\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "" "/// Parse a VARINT, returning the parsed value and the remaining bytes.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "" "// This is the last byte of the VARINT, so convert it to\n" " // a u64 and return it.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "// More than 7 bytes is invalid.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// Convert a tag into a field number and a WireType.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "/// Parse a field, returning the remaining bytes\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "" "\"Based on the wire type, build a Field, consuming as many bytes as " "necessary.\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "\"Return the field, and any un-consumed bytes.\"" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "" "/// Parse a message in the given data, calling `T::add_field` for each field " "in\n" "/// the message.\n" "///\n" "/// The entire input is consumed.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/exercise.md msgid "// TODO: Implement ProtoMessage for Person and PhoneNumber.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "// Unwrap error because `value` is definitely 4 bytes long.\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "// skip everything else\n" msgstr "" #: src/slices-and-lifetimes/solution.md msgid "b\"hello\"" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md #, fuzzy msgid "Welcome to Day 4" msgstr "Добро пожаловать в День 1" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "" "Today we will cover topics relating to building large-scale software in Rust:" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "Iterators: a deep dive on the `Iterator` trait." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "Modules and visibility." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "Testing." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "Error handling: panics, `Result`, and the try operator `?`." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "" "Unsafe Rust: the escape hatch when you can't express yourself in safe Rust." msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "[Welcome](./welcome-day-4.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "[Iterators](./iterators.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "[Modules](./modules.md) (40 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4.md msgid "[Testing](./testing.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/iterators.md msgid "[Iterator](./iterators/iterator.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/iterators.md msgid "[IntoIterator](./iterators/intoiterator.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/iterators.md msgid "[FromIterator](./iterators/fromiterator.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/iterators.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Iterator Method Chaining](./iterators/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/iterator.md msgid "" "The [`Iterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html) " "trait supports iterating over values in a collection. It requires a `next` " "method and provides lots of methods. Many standard library types implement " "`Iterator`, and you can implement it yourself, too:" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/iterator.md msgid "\"fib({i}): {n}\"" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/iterator.md msgid "" "The `Iterator` trait implements many common functional programming " "operations over collections (e.g. `map`, `filter`, `reduce`, etc). This is " "the trait where you can find all the documentation about them. In Rust these " "functions should produce the code as efficient as equivalent imperative " "implementations." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/iterator.md msgid "" "`IntoIterator` is the trait that makes for loops work. It is implemented by " "collection types such as `Vec` and references to them such as `&Vec` " "and `&[T]`. Ranges also implement it. This is why you can iterate over a " "vector with `for i in some_vec { .. }` but `some_vec.next()` doesn't exist." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "The `Iterator` trait tells you how to _iterate_ once you have created an " "iterator. The related trait [`IntoIterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" "iter/trait.IntoIterator.html) defines how to create an iterator for a type. " "It is used automatically by the `for` loop." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "\"point = {x}, {y}\"" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "Click through to the docs for `IntoIterator`. Every implementation of " "`IntoIterator` must declare two types:" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "`Item`: the type to iterate over, such as `i8`," msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "`IntoIter`: the `Iterator` type returned by the `into_iter` method." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "Note that `IntoIter` and `Item` are linked: the iterator must have the same " "`Item` type, which means that it returns `Option`" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "The example iterates over all combinations of x and y coordinates." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "Try iterating over the grid twice in `main`. Why does this fail? Note that " "`IntoIterator::into_iter` takes ownership of `self`." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "Fix this issue by implementing `IntoIterator` for `&Grid` and storing a " "reference to the `Grid` in `GridIter`." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/intoiterator.md msgid "" "The same problem can occur for standard library types: `for e in " "some_vector` will take ownership of `some_vector` and iterate over owned " "elements from that vector. Use `for e in &some_vector` instead, to iterate " "over references to elements of `some_vector`." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "FromIterator" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "" "[`FromIterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.FromIterator.html) " "lets you build a collection from an [`Iterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/" "std/iter/trait.Iterator.html)." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "\"prime_squares: {prime_squares:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "`Iterator` implements" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "There are two ways to specify `B` for this method:" msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "" "With the \"turbofish\": `some_iterator.collect::()`, as " "shown. The `_` shorthand used here lets Rust infer the type of the `Vec` " "elements." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "" "With type inference: `let prime_squares: Vec<_> = some_iterator.collect()`. " "Rewrite the example to use this form." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/fromiterator.md msgid "" "There are basic implementations of `FromIterator` for `Vec`, `HashMap`, etc. " "There are also more specialized implementations which let you do cool things " "like convert an `Iterator>` into a `Result, E>`." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/exercise.md msgid "" "In this exercise, you will need to find and use some of the provided methods " "in the [`Iterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html) " "trait to implement a complex calculation." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/exercise.md msgid "" "Copy the following code to and make the tests " "pass. Use an iterator expression and `collect` the result to construct the " "return value." msgstr "" #: src/iterators/exercise.md src/iterators/solution.md msgid "" "/// Calculate the differences between elements of `values` offset by " "`offset`,\n" "/// wrapping around from the end of `values` to the beginning.\n" "///\n" "/// Element `n` of the result is `values[(n+offset)%len] - values[n]`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "[Modules](./modules/modules.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "[Filesystem Hierarchy](./modules/filesystem.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "[Visibility](./modules/visibility.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "[use, super, self](./modules/paths.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Modules for a GUI Library](./modules/exercise.md) (15 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/modules.md msgid "This segment should take about 40 minutes" msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "We have seen how `impl` blocks let us namespace functions to a type." msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "Similarly, `mod` lets us namespace types and functions:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "\"In the foo module\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "\"In the bar module\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "" "Packages provide functionality and include a `Cargo.toml` file that " "describes how to build a bundle of 1+ crates." msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "" "Crates are a tree of modules, where a binary crate creates an executable and " "a library crate compiles to a library." msgstr "" #: src/modules/modules.md msgid "Modules define organization, scope, and are the focus of this section." msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "Omitting the module content will tell Rust to look for it in another file:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "This tells rust that the `garden` module content is found at `src/garden." "rs`. Similarly, a `garden::vegetables` module can be found at `src/garden/" "vegetables.rs`." msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "The `crate` root is in:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "`src/lib.rs` (for a library crate)" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "`src/main.rs` (for a binary crate)" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "Modules defined in files can be documented, too, using \"inner doc " "comments\". These document the item that contains them -- in this case, a " "module." msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "//! This module implements the garden, including a highly performant " "germination\n" "//! implementation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "// Re-export types from this module.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "/// Sow the given seed packets.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "/// Harvest the produce in the garden that is ready.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "Before Rust 2018, modules needed to be located at `module/mod.rs` instead of " "`module.rs`, and this is still a working alternative for editions after 2018." msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "The main reason to introduce `filename.rs` as alternative to `filename/mod." "rs` was because many files named `mod.rs` can be hard to distinguish in IDEs." msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "Deeper nesting can use folders, even if the main module is a file:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "The place rust will look for modules can be changed with a compiler " "directive:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "\"some/path.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/filesystem.md msgid "" "This is useful, for example, if you would like to place tests for a module " "in a file named `some_module_test.rs`, similar to the convention in Go." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Modules are a privacy boundary:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Module items are private by default (hides implementation details)." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Parent and sibling items are always visible." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "" "In other words, if an item is visible in module `foo`, it's visible in all " "the descendants of `foo`." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "\"outer::private\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "\"outer::public\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "\"outer::inner::private\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "\"outer::inner::public\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Use the `pub` keyword to make modules public." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "" "Additionally, there are advanced `pub(...)` specifiers to restrict the scope " "of public visibility." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "" "See the [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/visibility-and-" "privacy.html#pubin-path-pubcrate-pubsuper-and-pubself)." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Configuring `pub(crate)` visibility is a common pattern." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "Less commonly, you can give visibility to a specific path." msgstr "" #: src/modules/visibility.md msgid "" "In any case, visibility must be granted to an ancestor module (and all of " "its descendants)." msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "use, super, self" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "" "A module can bring symbols from another module into scope with `use`. You " "will typically see something like this at the top of each module:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "Paths" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "Paths are resolved as follows:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "As a relative path:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "`foo` or `self::foo` refers to `foo` in the current module," msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "`super::foo` refers to `foo` in the parent module." msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "As an absolute path:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "`crate::foo` refers to `foo` in the root of the current crate," msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "`bar::foo` refers to `foo` in the `bar` crate." msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "" "It is common to \"re-export\" symbols at a shorter path. For example, the " "top-level `lib.rs` in a crate might have" msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "" "making `DiskStorage` and `NetworkStorage` available to other crates with a " "convenient, short path." msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "" "For the most part, only items that appear in a module need to be `use`'d. " "However, a trait must be in scope to call any methods on that trait, even if " "a type implementing that trait is already in scope. For example, to use the " "`read_to_string` method on a type implementing the `Read` trait, you need to " "`use std::io::Read`." msgstr "" #: src/modules/paths.md msgid "" "The `use` statement can have a wildcard: `use std::io::*`. This is " "discouraged because it is not clear which items are imported, and those " "might change over time." msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "" "In this exercise, you will reorganize a small GUI Library implementation. " "This library defines a `Widget` trait and a few implementations of that " "trait, as well as a `main` function." msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "" "It is typical to put each type or set of closely-related types into its own " "module, so each widget type should get its own module." msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "Cargo Setup" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "" "The Rust playground only supports one file, so you will need to make a Cargo " "project on your local filesystem:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "" "Edit the resulting `src/main.rs` to add `mod` statements, and add additional " "files in the `src` directory." msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "Source" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "Here's the single-module implementation of the GUI library:" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md msgid "/// Natural width of `self`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md msgid "/// Draw the widget into a buffer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md msgid "/// Draw the widget on standard output.\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md msgid "\"{buffer}\"" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "// Add 4 paddings for borders\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md msgid "" "// TODO: Change draw_into to return Result<(), std::fmt::Error>. Then use " "the\n" " // ?-operator here instead of .unwrap().\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/exercise.md src/modules/solution.md msgid "\"+-{:-. Then use\n" " // the ?-operator here instead of .unwrap().\n" msgstr "" #: src/modules/solution.md msgid "// ---- src/main.rs ----\n" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Test Modules](./testing/unit-tests.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Other Types of Tests](./testing/other.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Useful Crates](./testing/useful-crates.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[GoogleTest](./testing/googletest.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Mocking](./testing/mocking.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Compiler Lints and Clippy](./testing/lints.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing.md msgid "[Exercise: Luhn Algorithm](./testing/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "Unit Tests" msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "Rust and Cargo come with a simple unit test framework:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "Unit tests are supported throughout your code." msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "Integration tests are supported via the `tests/` directory." msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "" "Tests are marked with `#[test]`. Unit tests are often put in a nested " "`tests` module, using `#[cfg(test)]` to conditionally compile them only when " "building tests." msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Hello World\"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "This lets you unit test private helpers." msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "The `#[cfg(test)]` attribute is only active when you run `cargo test`." msgstr "" #: src/testing/unit-tests.md msgid "Run the tests in the playground in order to show their results." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "Integration Tests" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "If you want to test your library as a client, use an integration test." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "Create a `.rs` file under `tests/`:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "// tests/my_library.rs\n" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "These tests only have access to the public API of your crate." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "Documentation Tests" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "Rust has built-in support for documentation tests:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "" "/// Shortens a string to the given length.\n" "///\n" "/// ```\n" "/// # use playground::shorten_string;\n" "/// assert_eq!(shorten_string(\"Hello World\", 5), \"Hello\");\n" "/// assert_eq!(shorten_string(\"Hello World\", 20), \"Hello World\");\n" "/// ```\n" msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "Code blocks in `///` comments are automatically seen as Rust code." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "The code will be compiled and executed as part of `cargo test`." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "" "Adding `#` in the code will hide it from the docs, but will still compile/" "run it." msgstr "" #: src/testing/other.md msgid "" "Test the above code on the [Rust Playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?" "version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=3ce2ad13ea1302f6572cb15cd96becf0)." msgstr "" #: src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "Rust comes with only basic support for writing tests." msgstr "" #: src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "Here are some additional crates which we recommend for writing tests:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "" "[googletest](https://docs.rs/googletest): Comprehensive test assertion " "library in the tradition of GoogleTest for C++." msgstr "" #: src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "[proptest](https://docs.rs/proptest): Property-based testing for Rust." msgstr "" #: src/testing/useful-crates.md msgid "" "[rstest](https://docs.rs/rstest): Support for fixtures and parameterised " "tests." msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "The [GoogleTest](https://docs.rs/googletest/) crate allows for flexible test " "assertions using _matchers_:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "\"baz\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "\"xyz\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "If we change the last element to `\"!\"`, the test fails with a structured " "error message pin-pointing the error:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "GoogleTest is not part of the Rust Playground, so you need to run this " "example in a local environment. Use `cargo add googletest` to quickly add it " "to an existing Cargo project." msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "The `use googletest::prelude::*;` line imports a number of [commonly used " "macros and types](https://docs.rs/googletest/latest/googletest/prelude/index." "html)." msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "This just scratches the surface, there are many builtin matchers." msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "A particularly nice feature is that mismatches in multi-line strings strings " "are shown as a diff:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "\"Memory safety found,\\n\\\n" " Rust's strong typing guides the way,\\n\\\n" " Secure code you'll write.\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "\"Memory safety found,\\n\\\n" " Rust's silly humor guides the way,\\n\\\n" " Secure code you'll write.\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "shows a color-coded diff (colors not shown here):" msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "" "The crate is a Rust port of [GoogleTest for C++](https://google.github.io/" "googletest/)." msgstr "" #: src/testing/googletest.md msgid "GoogleTest is available for use in AOSP." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "For mocking, [Mockall](https://docs.rs/mockall/) is a widely used library. " "You need to refactor your code to use traits, which you can then quickly " "mock:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "The advice here is for Android (AOSP) where Mockall is the recommended " "mocking library. There are other [mocking libraries available on crates.io]" "(https://crates.io/keywords/mock), in particular in the area of mocking HTTP " "services. The other mocking libraries work in a similar fashion as Mockall, " "meaning that they make it easy to get a mock implementation of a given trait." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "Note that mocking is somewhat _controversial_: mocks allow you to completely " "isolate a test from its dependencies. The immediate result is faster and " "more stable test execution. On the other hand, the mocks can be configured " "wrongly and return output different from what the real dependencies would do." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "If at all possible, it is recommended that you use the real dependencies. As " "an example, many databases allow you to configure an in-memory backend. This " "means that you get the correct behavior in your tests, plus they are fast " "and will automatically clean up after themselves." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "Similarly, many web frameworks allow you to start an in-process server which " "binds to a random port on `localhost`. Always prefer this over mocking away " "the framework since it helps you test your code in the real environment." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "Mockall is not part of the Rust Playground, so you need to run this example " "in a local environment. Use `cargo add mockall` to quickly add Mockall to an " "existing Cargo project." msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "Mockall has a lot more functionality. In particular, you can set up " "expectations which depend on the arguments passed. Here we use this to mock " "a cat which becomes hungry 3 hours after the last time it was fed:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/mocking.md msgid "" "You can use `.times(n)` to limit the number of times a mock method can be " "called to `n` --- the mock will automatically panic when dropped if this " "isn't satisfied." msgstr "" #: src/testing/lints.md msgid "" "The Rust compiler produces fantastic error messages, as well as helpful " "built-in lints. [Clippy](https://doc.rust-lang.org/clippy/) provides even " "more lints, organized into groups that can be enabled per-project." msgstr "" #: src/testing/lints.md msgid "\"X probably fits in a u16, right? {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/lints.md msgid "" "Run the code sample and examine the error message. There are also lints " "visible here, but those will not be shown once the code compiles. Switch to " "the Playground site to show those lints." msgstr "" #: src/testing/lints.md msgid "" "After resolving the lints, run `clippy` on the playground site to show " "clippy warnings. Clippy has extensive documentation of its lints, and adds " "new lints (including default-deny lints) all the time." msgstr "" #: src/testing/lints.md msgid "" "Note that errors or warnings with `help: ...` can be fixed with `cargo fix` " "or via your editor." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "Luhn Algorithm" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "" "The [Luhn algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhn_algorithm) is used " "to validate credit card numbers. The algorithm takes a string as input and " "does the following to validate the credit card number:" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "Ignore all spaces. Reject number with less than two digits." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "" "Moving from **right to left**, double every second digit: for the number " "`1234`, we double `3` and `1`. For the number `98765`, we double `6` and `8`." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "" "After doubling a digit, sum the digits if the result is greater than 9. So " "doubling `7` becomes `14` which becomes `1 + 4 = 5`." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "Sum all the undoubled and doubled digits." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "The credit card number is valid if the sum ends with `0`." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md msgid "" "The provided code provides a buggy implementation of the luhn algorithm, " "along with two basic unit tests that confirm that most the algorithm is " "implemented correctly." msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "Copy the code below to and write additional " "tests to uncover bugs in the provided implementation, fixing any bugs you " "find." msgstr "" "Скопируйте приведенный ниже код в и реализуйте " "функции:" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"4263 9826 4026 9299\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"4539 3195 0343 6467\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"7992 7398 713\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"4223 9826 4026 9299\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"4539 3195 0343 6476\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/exercise.md src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"8273 1232 7352 0569\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "// This is the buggy version that appears in the problem.\n" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "// This is the solution and passes all of the tests below.\n" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"1234 5678 1234 5670\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"Is {cc_number} a valid credit card number? {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"yes\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"no\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"foo 0 0\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\" \"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\" \"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\" \"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\"0\"" msgstr "" #: src/testing/solution.md msgid "\" 0 0 \"" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4-afternoon.md msgid "[Error Handling](./error-handling.md) (45 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4-afternoon.md msgid "[Unsafe Rust](./unsafe-rust.md) (1 hour and 5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/welcome-day-4-afternoon.md msgid "Including 10 minute breaks, this session should take about 2 hours" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "[Panics](./error-handling/panics.md) (3 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "[Try Operator](./error-handling/try.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "[Try Conversions](./error-handling/try-conversions.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "[Error Trait](./error-handling/error.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "" "[thiserror and anyhow](./error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling.md msgid "" "[Exercise: Rewriting with Result](./error-handling/exercise.md) (20 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Rust handles fatal errors with a \"panic\"." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Rust will trigger a panic if a fatal error happens at runtime:" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "\"v[100]: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Panics are for unrecoverable and unexpected errors." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Panics are symptoms of bugs in the program." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Runtime failures like failed bounds checks can panic" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Assertions (such as `assert!`) panic on failure" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "Purpose-specific panics can use the `panic!` macro." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "" "A panic will \"unwind\" the stack, dropping values just as if the functions " "had returned." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "" "Use non-panicking APIs (such as `Vec::get`) if crashing is not acceptable." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "" "By default, a panic will cause the stack to unwind. The unwinding can be " "caught:" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "\"No problem here!\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "\"{result:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "\"oh no!\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "" "Catching is unusual; do not attempt to implement exceptions with " "`catch_unwind`!" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "" "This can be useful in servers which should keep running even if a single " "request crashes." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/panics.md msgid "This does not work if `panic = 'abort'` is set in your `Cargo.toml`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "" "Runtime errors like connection-refused or file-not-found are handled with " "the `Result` type, but matching this type on every call can be cumbersome. " "The try-operator `?` is used to return errors to the caller. It lets you " "turn the common" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "into the much simpler" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "We can use this to simplify our error handling code:" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "//fs::write(\"config.dat\", \"alice\").unwrap();\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md src/error-handling/try-conversions.md #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"config.dat\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "\"username or error: {username:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "Simplify the `read_username` function to use `?`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "The `username` variable can be either `Ok(string)` or `Err(error)`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "" "Use the `fs::write` call to test out the different scenarios: no file, empty " "file, file with username." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try.md msgid "" "Note that `main` can return a `Result<(), E>` as long as it implements `std::" "process:Termination`. In practice, this means that `E` implements `Debug`. " "The executable will print the `Err` variant and return a nonzero exit status " "on error." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "The effective expansion of `?` is a little more complicated than previously " "indicated:" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "works the same as" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "The `From::from` call here means we attempt to convert the error type to the " "type returned by the function. This makes it easy to encapsulate errors into " "higher-level errors." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "\"IO error: {e}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "\"Found no username in {path}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "//fs::write(\"config.dat\", \"\").unwrap();\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "The `?` operator must return a value compatible with the return type of the " "function. For `Result`, it means that the error types have to be compatible. " "A function that returns `Result` can only use `?` on a value " "of type `Result` if `ErrorOuter` and `ErrorInner` are the " "same type or if `ErrorOuter` implements `From`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "A common alternative to a `From` implementation is `Result::map_err`, " "especially when the conversion only happens in one place." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "There is no compatibility requirement for `Option`. A function returning " "`Option` can use the `?` operator on `Option` for arbitrary `T` and " "`U` types." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/try-conversions.md msgid "" "A function that returns `Result` cannot use `?` on `Option` and vice versa. " "However, `Option::ok_or` converts `Option` to `Result` whereas `Result::ok` " "turns `Result` into `Option`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "Dynamic Error Types" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "" "Sometimes we want to allow any type of error to be returned without writing " "our own enum covering all the different possibilities. The `std::error::" "Error` trait makes it easy to create a trait object that can contain any " "error." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "\"count.dat\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "\"1i3\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "\"Count: {count}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "\"Error: {err}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "" "The `read_count` function can return `std::io::Error` (from file operations) " "or `std::num::ParseIntError` (from `String::parse`)." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "" "Boxing errors saves on code, but gives up the ability to cleanly handle " "different error cases differently in the program. As such it's generally not " "a good idea to use `Box` in the public API of a library, but it " "can be a good option in a program where you just want to display the error " "message somewhere." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/error.md msgid "" "Make sure to implement the `std::error::Error` trait when defining a custom " "error type so it can be boxed. But if you need to support the `no_std` " "attribute, keep in mind that the `std::error::Error` trait is currently " "compatible with `no_std` in [nightly](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/" "issues/103765) only." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "The [`thiserror`](https://docs.rs/thiserror/) and [`anyhow`](https://docs.rs/" "anyhow/) crates are widely used to simplify error handling." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "`thiserror` is often used in libraries to create custom error types that " "implement `From`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "`anyhow` is often used by applications to help with error handling in " "functions, including adding contextual information to your errors." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"Found no username in {0}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"Failed to open {path}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"Failed to read\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"Username: {username}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "\"Error: {err:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "`thiserror`" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "The `Error` derive macro is provided by `thiserror`, and has lots of useful " "attributes to help define error types in a compact way." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "The `std::error::Error` trait is derived automatically." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "The message from `#[error]` is used to derive the `Display` trait." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "`anyhow`" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "`anyhow::Error` is essentially a wrapper around `Box`. As such " "it's again generally not a good choice for the public API of a library, but " "is widely used in applications." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "`anyhow::Result` is a type alias for `Result`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "Actual error type inside of it can be extracted for examination if necessary." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "Functionality provided by `anyhow::Result` may be familiar to Go " "developers, as it provides similar usage patterns and ergonomics to `(T, " "error)` from Go." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/thiserror-and-anyhow.md msgid "" "`anyhow::Context` is a trait implemented for the standard `Result` and " "`Option` types. `use anyhow::Context` is necessary to enable `.context()` " "and `.with_context()` on those types." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "Exercise: Rewriting with Result" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "" "The following implements a very simple parser for an expression language. " "However, it handles errors by panicking. Rewrite it to instead use idiomatic " "error handling and propagate errors to a return from `main`. Feel free to " "use `thiserror` and `anyhow`." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "" "HINT: start by fixing error handling in the `parse` function. Once that is " "working correctly, update `Tokenizer` to implement " "`Iterator>` and handle that in the parser." msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// An arithmetic operator.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// A token in the expression language.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// An expression in the expression language.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// A reference to a variable.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// A literal number.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "/// A binary operation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'z'" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'_'" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'+'" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "'-'" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "\"Unexpected character {c}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"Unexpected end of input\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "\"Invalid 32-bit integer'\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md msgid "\"Unexpected token {tok:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "// Look ahead to parse a binary operation if present.\n" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"10+foo+20-30\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/exercise.md src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"{expr:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"Unexpected character '{0}' in input\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"Tokenizer error: {0}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"Unexpected token {0:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/error-handling/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid number\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Unsafe](./unsafe-rust/unsafe.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "" "[Dereferencing Raw Pointers](./unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md) (10 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Mutable Static Variables](./unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Unions](./unsafe-rust/unions.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Unsafe Functions](./unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Unsafe Traits](./unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md) (5 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust.md msgid "[Exercise: FFI Wrapper](./unsafe-rust/exercise.md) (30 minutes)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "The Rust language has two parts:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "**Safe Rust:** memory safe, no undefined behavior possible." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "" "**Unsafe Rust:** can trigger undefined behavior if preconditions are " "violated." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "" "We saw mostly safe Rust in this course, but it's important to know what " "Unsafe Rust is." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "" "Unsafe code is usually small and isolated, and its correctness should be " "carefully documented. It is usually wrapped in a safe abstraction layer." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Unsafe Rust gives you access to five new capabilities:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Dereference raw pointers." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Access or modify mutable static variables." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Access `union` fields." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Call `unsafe` functions, including `extern` functions." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "Implement `unsafe` traits." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "" "We will briefly cover unsafe capabilities next. For full details, please see " "[Chapter 19.1 in the Rust Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch19-01-" "unsafe-rust.html) and the [Rustonomicon](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/)." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe.md msgid "" "Unsafe Rust does not mean the code is incorrect. It means that developers " "have turned off some compiler safety features and have to write correct code " "by themselves. It means the compiler no longer enforces Rust's memory-safety " "rules." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "Creating pointers is safe, but dereferencing them requires `unsafe`:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "\"careful!\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "// Safe because r1 and r2 were obtained from references and so are\n" " // guaranteed to be non-null and properly aligned, the objects " "underlying\n" " // the references from which they were obtained are live throughout the\n" " // whole unsafe block, and they are not accessed either through the\n" " // references or concurrently through any other pointers.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "\"r1 is: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "\"uhoh\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "\"r2 is: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "// NOT SAFE. DO NOT DO THIS.\n" " /*\n" " let r3: &String = unsafe { &*r1 };\n" " drop(s);\n" " println!(\"r3 is: {}\", *r3);\n" " */" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "It is good practice (and required by the Android Rust style guide) to write " "a comment for each `unsafe` block explaining how the code inside it " "satisfies the safety requirements of the unsafe operations it is doing." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "In the case of pointer dereferences, this means that the pointers must be " "[_valid_](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/index.html#safety), i.e.:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "The pointer must be non-null." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "The pointer must be _dereferenceable_ (within the bounds of a single " "allocated object)." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "The object must not have been deallocated." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "There must not be concurrent accesses to the same location." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "If the pointer was obtained by casting a reference, the underlying object " "must be live and no reference may be used to access the memory." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "In most cases the pointer must also be properly aligned." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/dereferencing.md msgid "" "The \"NOT SAFE\" section gives an example of a common kind of UB bug: `*r1` " "has the `'static` lifetime, so `r3` has type `&'static String`, and thus " "outlives `s`. Creating a reference from a pointer requires _great care_." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "It is safe to read an immutable static variable:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Hello, world!\"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "\"HELLO_WORLD: {HELLO_WORLD}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "" "However, since data races can occur, it is unsafe to read and write mutable " "static variables:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "\"COUNTER: {COUNTER}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "" "The program here is safe because it is single-threaded. However, the Rust " "compiler is conservative and will assume the worst. Try removing the " "`unsafe` and see how the compiler explains that it is undefined behavior to " "mutate a static from multiple threads." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/mutable-static.md msgid "" "Using a mutable static is generally a bad idea, but there are some cases " "where it might make sense in low-level `no_std` code, such as implementing a " "heap allocator or working with some C APIs." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "Unions are like enums, but you need to track the active field yourself:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "\"int: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "\"bool: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md #, fuzzy msgid "// Undefined behavior!\n" msgstr "Отсутствие неопределенного поведения во время выполнения:" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "" "Unions are very rarely needed in Rust as you can usually use an enum. They " "are occasionally needed for interacting with C library APIs." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unions.md msgid "" "If you just want to reinterpret bytes as a different type, you probably want " "[`std::mem::transmute`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/mem/fn." "transmute.html) or a safe wrapper such as the [`zerocopy`](https://crates.io/" "crates/zerocopy) crate." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "Calling Unsafe Functions" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "A function or method can be marked `unsafe` if it has extra preconditions " "you must uphold to avoid undefined behaviour:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md src/android/interoperability/with-c.md #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"C\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "\"🗻∈🌏\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "// Safe because the indices are in the correct order, within the bounds of\n" " // the string slice, and lie on UTF-8 sequence boundaries.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "\"emoji: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "\"char count: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md #, fuzzy msgid "// Undefined behavior if abs misbehaves.\n" msgstr "Отсутствие неопределенного поведения во время выполнения:" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "\"Absolute value of -3 according to C: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "// Not upholding the UTF-8 encoding requirement breaks memory safety!\n" " // println!(\"emoji: {}\", unsafe { emojis.get_unchecked(0..3) });\n" " // println!(\"char count: {}\", count_chars(unsafe {\n" " // emojis.get_unchecked(0..3) }));\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "Writing Unsafe Functions" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "You can mark your own functions as `unsafe` if they require particular " "conditions to avoid undefined behaviour." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "/// Swaps the values pointed to by the given pointers.\n" "///\n" "/// # Safety\n" "///\n" "/// The pointers must be valid and properly aligned.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "// Safe because ...\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "\"a = {}, b = {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "`get_unchecked`, like most `_unchecked` functions, is unsafe, because it can " "create UB if the range is incorrect. `abs` is incorrect for a different " "reason: it is an external function (FFI). Calling external functions is " "usually only a problem when those functions do things with pointers which " "might violate Rust's memory model, but in general any C function might have " "undefined behaviour under any arbitrary circumstances." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "The `\"C\"` in this example is the ABI; [other ABIs are available too]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/external-blocks.html)." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "We wouldn't actually use pointers for a `swap` function - it can be done " "safely with references." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-functions.md msgid "" "Note that unsafe code is allowed within an unsafe function without an " "`unsafe` block. We can prohibit this with `#[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]`. " "Try adding it and see what happens. This will likely change in a future Rust " "edition." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "Implementing Unsafe Traits" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "" "Like with functions, you can mark a trait as `unsafe` if the implementation " "must guarantee particular conditions to avoid undefined behaviour." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "" "For example, the `zerocopy` crate has an unsafe trait that looks [something " "like this](https://docs.rs/zerocopy/latest/zerocopy/trait.AsBytes.html):" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "" "/// ...\n" "/// # Safety\n" "/// The type must have a defined representation and no padding.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "// Safe because u32 has a defined representation and no padding.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "" "There should be a `# Safety` section on the Rustdoc for the trait explaining " "the requirements for the trait to be safely implemented." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "" "The actual safety section for `AsBytes` is rather longer and more " "complicated." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/unsafe-traits.md msgid "The built-in `Send` and `Sync` traits are unsafe." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Safe FFI Wrapper" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "Rust has great support for calling functions through a _foreign function " "interface_ (FFI). We will use this to build a safe wrapper for the `libc` " "functions you would use from C to read the names of files in a directory." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "You will want to consult the manual pages:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "[`opendir(3)`](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/opendir.3.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "[`readdir(3)`](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/readdir.3.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "[`closedir(3)`](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/closedir.3.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "You will also want to browse the [`std::ffi`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" "ffi/) module. There you find a number of string types which you need for the " "exercise:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Encoding" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Use" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "[`str`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.str.html) and [`String`]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "UTF-8" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Text processing in Rust" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "[`CStr`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.CStr.html) and [`CString`]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.CString.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "NUL-terminated" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Communicating with C functions" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "[`OsStr`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsStr.html) and " "[`OsString`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsString.html)" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "OS-specific" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "Communicating with the OS" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "You will convert between all these types:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "`&str` to `CString`: you need to allocate space for a trailing `\\0` " "character," msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "`CString` to `*const i8`: you need a pointer to call C functions," msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "`*const i8` to `&CStr`: you need something which can find the trailing `\\0` " "character," msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "`&CStr` to `&[u8]`: a slice of bytes is the universal interface for \"some " "unknown data\"," msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "`&[u8]` to `&OsStr`: `&OsStr` is a step towards `OsString`, use [`OsStrExt`]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/os/unix/ffi/trait.OsStrExt.html) to create it," msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "`&OsStr` to `OsString`: you need to clone the data in `&OsStr` to be able to " "return it and call `readdir` again." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "The [Nomicon](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/ffi.html) also has a very " "useful chapter about FFI." msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "" "Copy the code below to and fill in the missing " "functions and methods:" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"macos\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// Opaque type. See https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/ffi.html.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "" "// Layout according to the Linux man page for readdir(3), where ino_t and\n" " // off_t are resolved according to the definitions in\n" " // /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/{sys/types.h, bits/typesizes.h}.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// Layout according to the macOS man page for dir(5).\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"x86_64\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "" "// See https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/issues/414 and the section on\n" " // _DARWIN_FEATURE_64_BIT_INODE in the macOS man page for stat(2).\n" " //\n" " // \"Platforms that existed before these updates were available\" " "refers\n" " // to macOS (as opposed to iOS / wearOS / etc.) on Intel and " "PowerPC.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"readdir$INODE64\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "" "// Call opendir and return a Ok value if that worked,\n" " // otherwise return Err with a message.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md msgid "// Keep calling readdir until we get a NULL pointer back.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// Call closedir as needed.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\".\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/exercise.md src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"files: {:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"Invalid path: {err}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// SAFETY: path.as_ptr() cannot be NULL.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"Could not open {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "" "// Keep calling readdir until we get a NULL pointer back.\n" " // SAFETY: self.dir is never NULL.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// We have reached the end of the directory.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "" "// SAFETY: dirent is not NULL and dirent.d_name is NUL\n" " // terminated.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "// SAFETY: self.dir is not NULL.\n" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"Could not close {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"no-such-directory\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"Non UTF-8 character in path\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"..\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"foo.txt\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"The Foo Diaries\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"bar.png\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"crab.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/unsafe-rust/solution.md msgid "\"//! Crab\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "Welcome to Rust in Android" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "Rust is supported for system software on Android. This means that you can " "write new services, libraries, drivers or even firmware in Rust (or improve " "existing code as needed)." msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "We will attempt to call Rust from one of your own projects today. So try to " "find a little corner of your code base where we can move some lines of code " "to Rust. The fewer dependencies and \"exotic\" types the better. Something " "that parses some raw bytes would be ideal." msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "The speaker may mention any of the following given the increased use of Rust " "in Android:" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "Service example: [DNS over HTTP](https://security.googleblog.com/2022/07/dns-" "over-http3-in-android.html)" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "Libraries: [Rutabaga Virtual Graphics Interface](https://crosvm.dev/book/" "appendix/rutabaga_gfx.html)" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "Kernel Drivers: [Binder](https://lore.kernel.org/rust-for-linux/20231101-" "rust-binder-v1-0-08ba9197f637@google.com/)" msgstr "" #: src/android.md msgid "" "Firmware: [pKVM firmware](https://security.googleblog.com/2023/10/bare-metal-" "rust-in-android.html)" msgstr "" #: src/android/setup.md msgid "" "We will be using a Cuttlefish Android Virtual Device to test our code. Make " "sure you have access to one or create a new one with:" msgstr "" #: src/android/setup.md msgid "" "Please see the [Android Developer Codelab](https://source.android.com/docs/" "setup/start) for details." msgstr "" #: src/android/setup.md msgid "" "Cuttlefish is a reference Android device designed to work on generic Linux " "desktops. MacOS support is also planned." msgstr "" #: src/android/setup.md msgid "" "The Cuttlefish system image maintains high fidelity to real devices, and is " "the ideal emulator to run many Rust use cases." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "The Android build system (Soong) supports Rust via a number of modules:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Module Type" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Description" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_binary`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Produces a Rust binary." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_library`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Produces a Rust library, and provides both `rlib` and `dylib` variants." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_ffi`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Produces a Rust C library usable by `cc` modules, and provides both static " "and shared variants." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_proc_macro`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Produces a `proc-macro` Rust library. These are analogous to compiler " "plugins." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_test`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Produces a Rust test binary that uses the standard Rust test harness." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_fuzz`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Produces a Rust fuzz binary leveraging `libfuzzer`." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_protobuf`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Generates source and produces a Rust library that provides an interface for " "a particular protobuf." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "`rust_bindgen`" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Generates source and produces a Rust library containing Rust bindings to C " "libraries." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "We will look at `rust_binary` and `rust_library` next." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Additional items speaker may mention:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Cargo is not optimized for multi-language repos, and also downloads packages " "from the internet." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "For compliance and performance, Android must have crates in-tree. It must " "also interop with C/C++/Java code. Soong fills that gap." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "Soong has many similarities to Bazel, which is the open-source variant of " "Blaze (used in google3)." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "" "There is a plan to transition [Android](https://source.android.com/docs/" "setup/build/bazel/introduction), [ChromeOS](https://chromium.googlesource." "com/chromiumos/bazel/), and [Fuchsia](https://source.android.com/docs/setup/" "build/bazel/introduction) to Bazel." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Learning Bazel-like build rules is useful for all Rust OS developers." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules.md msgid "Fun fact: Data from Star Trek is a Soong-type Android." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md msgid "Rust Binaries" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md msgid "" "Let us start with a simple application. At the root of an AOSP checkout, " "create the following files:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "_hello_rust/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md msgid "\"hello_rust\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/android/build-rules/library.md #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"src/main.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "_hello_rust/src/main.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "//! Rust demo.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "/// Prints a greeting to standard output.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "\"Hello from Rust!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md msgid "You can now build, push, and run the binary:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/binary.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m hello_rust\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/hello_rust\" /data/local/tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/hello_rust\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "Rust Libraries" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "You use `rust_library` to create a new Rust library for Android." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "Here we declare a dependency on two libraries:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "`libgreeting`, which we define below," msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "" "`libtextwrap`, which is a crate already vendored in [`external/rust/crates/`]" "(https://cs.android.com/android/platform/superproject/+/master:external/rust/" "crates/)." msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "\"hello_rust_with_dep\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "\"libgreetings\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "\"libtextwrap\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "// Need this to avoid dynamic link error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "\"greetings\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md src/android/aidl/implementation.md #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"src/lib.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "_hello_rust/src/lib.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "//! Greeting library.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "/// Greet `name`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "\"Hello {name}, it is very nice to meet you!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "You build, push, and run the binary like before:" msgstr "" #: src/android/build-rules/library.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m hello_rust_with_dep\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/hello_rust_with_dep\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/hello_rust_with_dep\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl.md msgid "" "The [Android Interface Definition Language (AIDL)](https://developer.android." "com/guide/components/aidl) is supported in Rust:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl.md msgid "Rust code can call existing AIDL servers," msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl.md msgid "You can create new AIDL servers in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "AIDL Interfaces" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "You declare the API of your service using an AIDL interface:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "" "_birthday_service/aidl/com/example/birthdayservice/IBirthdayService.aidl_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md src/android/aidl/changing.md msgid "/** Birthday service interface. */" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md src/android/aidl/changing.md msgid "/** Generate a Happy Birthday message. */" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "_birthday_service/aidl/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "\"com.example.birthdayservice\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "\"com/example/birthdayservice/*.aidl\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "// Rust is not enabled by default\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/interface.md msgid "" "Add `vendor_available: true` if your AIDL file is used by a binary in the " "vendor partition." msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "Service Implementation" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "We can now implement the AIDL service:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "_birthday_service/src/lib.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "//! Implementation of the `IBirthdayService` AIDL interface.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "/// The `IBirthdayService` implementation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md msgid "\"Happy Birthday {name}, congratulations with the {years} years!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md src/android/aidl/server.md #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "_birthday_service/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "\"libbirthdayservice\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md src/android/aidl/server.md #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"birthdayservice\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md src/android/aidl/server.md #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"com.example.birthdayservice-rust\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/implementation.md src/android/aidl/server.md #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"libbinder_rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "AIDL Server" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "Finally, we can create a server which exposes the service:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "_birthday_service/src/server.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "//! Birthday service.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "/// Entry point for birthday service.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "\"Failed to register service\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md msgid "\"birthday_server\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/server.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"src/server.rs\"" msgstr "серверы." #: src/android/aidl/server.md src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "// To avoid dynamic link error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/deploy.md msgid "We can now build, push, and start the service:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/deploy.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m birthday_server\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/birthday_server\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb root\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/birthday_server\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/deploy.md msgid "In another terminal, check that the service runs:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/deploy.md msgid "You can also call the service with `service call`:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "AIDL Client" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "Finally, we can create a Rust client for our new service." msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "_birthday_service/src/client.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "/// Connect to the BirthdayService.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "/// Call the birthday service.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"Failed to connect to BirthdayService\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"{msg}\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"birthday_client\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "\"src/client.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "Notice that the client does not depend on `libbirthdayservice`." msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "Build, push, and run the client on your device:" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/client.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m birthday_client\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/birthday_client\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/birthday_client Charlie 60\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/aidl/changing.md msgid "" "Let us extend the API with more functionality: we want to let clients " "specify a list of lines for the birthday card:" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "" "You should use the `log` crate to automatically log to `logcat` (on-device) " "or `stdout` (on-host):" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "_hello_rust_logs/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"hello_rust_logs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"liblog_rust\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"liblogger\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "_hello_rust_logs/src/main.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "//! Rust logging demo.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "/// Logs a greeting.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"rust\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"Starting program.\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"Things are going fine.\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "\"Something went wrong!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "Build, push, and run the binary on your device:" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m hello_rust_logs\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/hello_rust_logs\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/hello_rust_logs\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/logging.md msgid "The logs show up in `adb logcat`:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability.md msgid "" "Rust has excellent support for interoperability with other languages. This " "means that you can:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability.md msgid "Call Rust functions from other languages." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability.md msgid "Call functions written in other languages from Rust." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability.md msgid "" "When you call functions in a foreign language we say that you're using a " "_foreign function interface_, also known as FFI." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "Interoperability with C" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "" "Rust has full support for linking object files with a C calling convention. " "Similarly, you can export Rust functions and call them from C." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "You can do it by hand if you want:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "\"{x}, {abs_x}\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "" "We already saw this in the [Safe FFI Wrapper exercise](../../exercises/day-3/" "safe-ffi-wrapper.md)." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "" "This assumes full knowledge of the target platform. Not recommended for " "production." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c.md msgid "We will look at better options next." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "Using Bindgen" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "" "The [bindgen](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-bindgen/introduction.html) " "tool can auto-generate bindings from a C header file." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "First create a small C library:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "_interoperability/bindgen/libbirthday.h_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "_interoperability/bindgen/libbirthday.c_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"+--------------\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"| Happy Birthday %s!\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"| Congratulations with the %i years!\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "Add this to your `Android.bp` file:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "_interoperability/bindgen/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday.c\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "" "Create a wrapper header file for the library (not strictly needed in this " "example):" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "_interoperability/bindgen/libbirthday_wrapper.h_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "You can now auto-generate the bindings:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday_bindgen\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"birthday_bindgen\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday_wrapper.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"bindings\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "Finally, we can use the bindings in our Rust program:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"print_birthday_card\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"main.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "_interoperability/bindgen/main.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "//! Bindgen demo.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "// SAFETY: `print_card` is safe to call with a valid `card` pointer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m print_birthday_card\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/print_birthday_card\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/print_birthday_card\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "Finally, we can run auto-generated tests to ensure the bindings work:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"libbirthday_bindgen_test\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\":libbirthday_bindgen\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"general-tests\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "\"none\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/bindgen.md msgid "// Generated file, skip linting\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "Calling Rust" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "Exporting Rust functions and types to C is easy:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "_interoperability/rust/libanalyze/analyze.rs_" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "//! Rust FFI demo.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "/// Analyze the numbers.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"x ({x}) is smallest!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"y ({y}) is probably larger than x ({x})\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "_interoperability/rust/libanalyze/analyze.h_" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "_interoperability/rust/libanalyze/Android.bp_" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"libanalyze_ffi\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"analyze_ffi\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"analyze.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "We can now call this from a C binary:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "_interoperability/rust/analyze/main.c_" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"analyze.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "_interoperability/rust/analyze/Android.bp_" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"analyze_numbers\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "\"main.c\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "" "```shell\n" "m analyze_numbers\n" "adb push \"$ANDROID_PRODUCT_OUT/system/bin/analyze_numbers\" /data/local/" "tmp\n" "adb shell /data/local/tmp/analyze_numbers\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/with-c/rust.md msgid "" "`#[no_mangle]` disables Rust's usual name mangling, so the exported symbol " "will just be the name of the function. You can also use `#[export_name = " "\"some_name\"]` to specify whatever name you want." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp.md msgid "" "The [CXX crate](https://cxx.rs/) makes it possible to do safe " "interoperability between Rust and C++." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp.md msgid "The overall approach looks like this:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "" "CXX relies on a description of the function signatures that will be exposed " "from each language to the other. You provide this description using extern " "blocks in a Rust module annotated with the `#[cxx::bridge]` attribute macro." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "\"org::blobstore\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "// Shared structs with fields visible to both languages.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/generated-cpp.md msgid "// Rust types and signatures exposed to C++.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/generated-cpp.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"Rust\"" msgstr "Rustdoc" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "// C++ types and signatures exposed to Rust.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "\"C++\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "\"include/blobstore.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "The bridge is generally declared in an `ffi` module within your crate." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "" "From the declarations made in the bridge module, CXX will generate matching " "Rust and C++ type/function definitions in order to expose those items to " "both languages." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "" "To view the generated Rust code, use [cargo-expand](https://github.com/" "dtolnay/cargo-expand) to view the expanded proc macro. For most of the " "examples you would use `cargo expand ::ffi` to expand just the `ffi` module " "(though this doesn't apply for Android projects)." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/bridge.md msgid "To view the generated C++ code, look in `target/cxxbridge`." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md msgid "Rust Bridge Declarations" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md msgid "// Opaque type\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md msgid "// Method on `MyType`\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md #, fuzzy msgid "// Free function\n" msgstr "Функции" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md msgid "" "Items declared in the `extern \"Rust\"` reference items that are in scope in " "the parent module." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-bridge.md msgid "" "The CXX code generator uses your `extern \"Rust\"` section(s) to produce a C+" "+ header file containing the corresponding C++ declarations. The generated " "header has the same path as the Rust source file containing the bridge, " "except with a .rs.h file extension." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/generated-cpp.md msgid "Results in (roughly) the following C++:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "C++ Bridge Declarations" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "Results in (roughly) the following Rust:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "\"org$blobstore$cxxbridge1$new_blobstore_client\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "\"org$blobstore$cxxbridge1$BlobstoreClient$put\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "" "The programmer does not need to promise that the signatures they have typed " "in are accurate. CXX performs static assertions that the signatures exactly " "correspond with what is declared in C++." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-bridge.md msgid "" "`unsafe extern` blocks allow you to declare C++ functions that are safe to " "call from Rust." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-types.md msgid "// A=1, J=11, Q=12, K=13\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-types.md msgid "Only C-like (unit) enums are supported." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-types.md msgid "" "A limited number of traits are supported for `#[derive()]` on shared types. " "Corresponding functionality is also generated for the C++ code, e.g. if you " "derive `Hash` also generates an implementation of `std::hash` for the " "corresponding C++ type." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-enums.md msgid "Generated Rust:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-enums.md msgid "Generated C++:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/shared-enums.md msgid "" "On the Rust side, the code generated for shared enums is actually a struct " "wrapping a numeric value. This is because it is not UB in C++ for an enum " "class to hold a value different from all of the listed variants, and our " "Rust representation needs to have the same behavior." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "\"fallible1 requires depth > 0\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "\"Success!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "" "Rust functions that return `Result` are translated to exceptions on the C++ " "side." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "" "The exception thrown will always be of type `rust::Error`, which primarily " "exposes a way to get the error message string. The error message will come " "from the error type's `Display` impl." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/rust-result.md msgid "" "A panic unwinding from Rust to C++ will always cause the process to " "immediately terminate." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md msgid "\"example/include/example.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md msgid "\"Error: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md msgid "" "C++ functions declared to return a `Result` will catch any thrown exception " "on the C++ side and return it as an `Err` value to the calling Rust function." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/cpp-exception.md msgid "" "If an exception is thrown from an extern \"C++\" function that is not " "declared by the CXX bridge to return `Result`, the program calls C++'s `std::" "terminate`. The behavior is equivalent to the same exception being thrown " "through a `noexcept` C++ function." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md #, fuzzy msgid "Rust Type" msgstr "Экосистема Rust" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md #, fuzzy msgid "C++ Type" msgstr "Типы" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`rust::String`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`&str`" msgstr "`&str`" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`rust::Str`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md #, fuzzy msgid "`CxxString`" msgstr "Строки" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`std::string`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`&[T]`/`&mut [T]`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`rust::Slice`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`rust::Box`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`UniquePtr`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`std::unique_ptr`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`Vec`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`rust::Vec`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`CxxVector`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "`std::vector`" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "" "These types can be used in the fields of shared structs and the arguments " "and returns of extern functions." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "" "Note that Rust's `String` does not map directly to `std::string`. There are " "a few reasons for this:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "" "`std::string` does not uphold the UTF-8 invariant that `String` requires." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "" "The two types have different layouts in memory and so can't be passed " "directly between languages." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/type-mapping.md msgid "" "`std::string` requires move constructors that don't match Rust's move " "semantics, so a `std::string` can't be passed by value to Rust." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "Building in Android" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "" "Create a `cc_library_static` to build the C++ library, including the CXX " "generated header and source file." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "\"libcxx_test_cpp\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "\"cxx_test.cpp\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "\"cxx-bridge-header\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"libcxx_test_bridge_header\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"libcxx_test_bridge_code\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "" "Point out that `libcxx_test_bridge_header` and `libcxx_test_bridge_code` are " "the dependencies for the CXX-generated C++ bindings. We'll show how these " "are setup on the next slide." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "" "Note that you also need to depend on the `cxx-bridge-header` library in " "order to pull in common CXX definitions." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-cpp.md msgid "" "Full docs for using CXX in Android can be found in [the Android docs]" "(https://source.android.com/docs/setup/build/rust/building-rust-modules/" "android-rust-patterns#rust-cpp-interop-using-cxx). You may want to share " "that link with the class so that students know where they can find these " "instructions again in the future." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "" "Create two genrules: One to generate the CXX header, and one to generate the " "CXX source file. These are then used as inputs to the `cc_library_static`." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "" "// Generate a C++ header containing the C++ bindings\n" "// to the Rust exported functions in lib.rs.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"cxxbridge\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"$(location cxxbridge) $(in) --header > $(out)\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "\"lib.rs\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"lib.rs.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "// Generate the C++ code that Rust calls into.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"$(location cxxbridge) $(in) > $(out)\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "\"lib.rs.cc\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "" "The `cxxbridge` tool is a standalone tool that generates the C++ side of the " "bridge module. It is included in Android and available as a Soong tool." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-cpp-genrules.md msgid "" "By convention, if your Rust source file is `lib.rs` your header file will be " "named `lib.rs.h` and your source file will be named `lib.rs.cc`. This naming " "convention isn't enforced, though." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "" "Create a `rust_binary` that depends on `libcxx` and your `cc_library_static`." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "\"cxx_test\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/cpp/android-build-rust.md msgid "\"libcxx\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "Interoperability with Java" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "" "Java can load shared objects via [Java Native Interface (JNI)](https://en." "wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Native_Interface). The [`jni` crate](https://docs.rs/" "jni/) allows you to create a compatible library." msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "First, we create a Rust function to export to Java:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "_interoperability/java/src/lib.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "//! Rust <-> Java FFI demo.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "/// HelloWorld::hello method implementation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"system\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"Hello, {input}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "_interoperability/java/Android.bp_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"libhello_jni\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"hello_jni\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"libjni\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "We then call this function from Java:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "_interoperability/java/HelloWorld.java_:" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "\"helloworld_jni\"" msgstr "" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"HelloWorld.java\"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md #, fuzzy msgid "\"HelloWorld\"" msgstr "Привет, мир!" #: src/android/interoperability/java.md msgid "Finally, you can build, sync, and run the binary:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/android/morning.md msgid "" "This is a group exercise: We will look at one of the projects you work with " "and try to integrate some Rust into it. Some suggestions:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/android/morning.md msgid "Call your AIDL service with a client written in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/android/morning.md msgid "Move a function from your project to Rust and call it." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/android/morning.md msgid "" "No solution is provided here since this is open-ended: it relies on someone " "in the class having a piece of code which you can turn in to Rust on the fly." msgstr "" #: src/chromium.md msgid "Welcome to Rust in Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/chromium.md msgid "" "Rust is supported for third-party libraries in Chromium, with first-party " "glue code to connect between Rust and existing Chromium C++ code." msgstr "" #: src/chromium.md msgid "" "Today, we'll call into Rust to do something silly with strings. If you've " "got a corner of the code where you're displaying a UTF8 string to the user, " "feel free to follow this recipe in your part of the codebase instead of the " "exact part we talk about." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "" "Make sure you can build and run Chromium. Any platform and set of build " "flags is OK, so long as your code is relatively recent (commit position " "1223636 onwards, corresponding to November 2023):" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "" "(A component, debug build is recommended for quickest iteration time. This " "is the default!)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "" "See [How to build Chromium](https://www.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/get-" "the-code/) if you aren't already at that point. Be warned: setting up to " "build Chromium takes time." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "It's also recommended that you have Visual Studio code installed." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "About the exercises" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/setup.md msgid "" "This part of the course has a series of exercises which build on each other. " "We'll be doing them spread throughout the course instead of just at the end. " "If you don't have time to complete a certain part, don't worry: you can " "catch up in the next slot." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Rust community typically uses `cargo` and libraries from [crates.io](https://" "crates.io/). Chromium is built using `gn` and `ninja` and a curated set of " "dependencies." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "When writing code in Rust, your choices are:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Use `gn` and `ninja` with the help of the templates from `//build/rust/*." "gni` (e.g. `rust_static_library` that we'll meet later). This uses " "Chromium's audited toolchain and crates." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Use `cargo`, but [restrict yourself to Chromium's audited toolchain and " "crates](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/refs/heads/main/" "docs/rust.md#Using-cargo)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Use `cargo`, trusting a [toolchain](https://rustup.rs/) and/or [crates " "downloaded from the internet](https://crates.io/)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "From here on we'll be focusing on `gn` and `ninja`, because this is how Rust " "code can be built into the Chromium browser. At the same time, Cargo is an " "important part of the Rust ecosystem and you should keep it in your toolbox." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md #, fuzzy msgid "Mini exercise" msgstr "Упражнения" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Split into small groups and:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Brainstorm scenarios where `cargo` may offer an advantage and assess the " "risk profile of these scenarios." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Discuss which tools, libraries, and groups of people need to be trusted when " "using `gn` and `ninja`, offline `cargo`, etc." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Ask students to avoid peeking at the speaker notes before completing the " "exercise. Assuming folks taking the course are physically together, ask them " "to discuss in small groups of 3-4 people." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Notes/hints related to the first part of the exercise (\"scenarios where " "Cargo may offer an advantage\"):" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "It's fantastic that when writing a tool, or prototyping a part of Chromium, " "one has access to the rich ecosystem of crates.io libraries. There is a " "crate for almost anything and they are usually quite pleasant to use. " "(`clap` for command-line parsing, `serde` for serializing/deserializing to/" "from various formats, `itertools` for working with iterators, etc.)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`cargo` makes it easy to try a library (just add a single line to `Cargo." "toml` and start writing code)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "It may be worth comparing how CPAN helped make `perl` a popular choice. Or " "comparing with `python` + `pip`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Development experience is made really nice not only by core Rust tools (e.g. " "using `rustup` to switch to a different `rustc` version when testing a crate " "that needs to work on nightly, current stable, and older stable) but also by " "an ecosystem of third-party tools (e.g. Mozilla provides `cargo vet` for " "streamlining and sharing security audits; `criterion` crate gives a " "streamlined way to run benchmarks)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`cargo` makes it easy to add a tool via `cargo install --locked cargo-vet`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "It may be worth comparing with Chrome Extensions or VScode extensions." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Broad, generic examples of projects where `cargo` may be the right choice:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Perhaps surprisingly, Rust is becoming increasingly popular in the industry " "for writing command line tools. The breadth and ergonomics of libraries is " "comparable to Python, while being more robust (thanks to the rich " "typesystem) and running faster (as a compiled, rather than interpreted " "language)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Participating in the Rust ecosystem requires using standard Rust tools like " "Cargo. Libraries that want to get external contributions, and want to be " "used outside of Chromium (e.g. in Bazel or Android/Soong build environments) " "should probably use Cargo." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Examples of Chromium-related projects that are `cargo`\\-based:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`serde_json_lenient` (experimented with in other parts of Google which " "resulted in PRs with performance improvements)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Fontations libraries like `font-types`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`gnrt` tool (we will meet it later in the course) which depends on `clap` " "for command-line parsing and on `toml` for configuration files." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Disclaimer: a unique reason for using `cargo` was unavailability of `gn` " "when building and bootstrapping Rust standard library when building Rust " "toolchain.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`run_gnrt.py` uses Chromium's copy of `cargo` and `rustc`. `gnrt` depends on " "third-party libraries downloaded from the internet, by `run_gnrt.py` asks " "`cargo` that only `--locked` content is allowed via `Cargo.lock`.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Students may identify the following items as being implicitly or explicitly " "trusted:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`rustc` (the Rust compiler) which in turn depends on the LLVM libraries, the " "Clang compiler, the `rustc` sources (fetched from GitHub, reviewed by Rust " "compiler team), binary Rust compiler downloaded for bootstrapping" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "`rustup` (it may be worth pointing out that `rustup` is developed under the " "umbrella of the https://github.com/rust-lang/ organization - same as `rustc`)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "`cargo`, `rustfmt`, etc." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Various internal infrastructure (bots that build `rustc`, system for " "distributing the prebuilt toolchain to Chromium engineers, etc.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Cargo tools like `cargo audit`, `cargo vet`, etc." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "" "Rust libraries vendored into `//third_party/rust` (audited by " "security@chromium.org)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/cargo.md msgid "Other Rust libraries (some niche, some quite popular and commonly used)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "Chromium Rust policy" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "" "Chromium does not yet allow first-party Rust except in rare cases as " "approved by Chromium's [Area Tech Leads](https://source.chromium.org/" "chromium/chromium/src/+/main:ATL_OWNERS)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "" "Chromium's policy on third party libraries is outlined [here](https://" "chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/adding_to_third_party." "md#rust) - Rust is allowed for third party libraries under various " "circumstances, including if they're the best option for performance or for " "security." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "" "Very few Rust libraries directly expose a C/C++ API, so that means that " "nearly all such libraries will require a small amount of first-party glue " "code." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "" "```bob\n" "\"C++\" Rust\n" ".- - - - - - - - - -. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "-.\n" ": : : :\n" ": Existing Chromium : : Chromium Rust Existing " "Rust :\n" ": \"C++\" : : \"wrapper\" " "crate :\n" ": +---------------+ : : +----------------+ +-------------" "+ :\n" ": | | : : | | | " "| :\n" ": | o-----+-+-----------+-+-> o-+----------+--> " "| :\n" ": | | : Language : | | Crate | " "| :\n" ": +---------------+ : boundary : +----------------+ API +-------------" "+ :\n" ": : : :\n" "`- - - - - - - - - -' `- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " "-'\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "" "First-party Rust glue code for a particular third-party crate should " "normally be kept in `third_party/rust///wrapper`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "Because of this, today's course will be heavily focused on:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "Bringing in third-party Rust libraries (\"crates\")" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "Writing glue code to be able to use those crates from Chromium C++." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/policy.md msgid "If this policy changes over time, the course will evolve to keep up." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "Build rules" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Rust code is usually built using `cargo`. Chromium builds with `gn` and " "`ninja` for efficiency --- its static rules allow maximum parallelism. Rust " "is no exception." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "Adding Rust code to Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "In some existing Chromium `BUILD.gn` file, declare a `rust_static_library`:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "import(\"//build/rust/rust_static_library.gni\")\n" "\n" "rust_static_library(\"my_rust_lib\") {\n" " crate_root = \"lib.rs\"\n" " sources = [ \"lib.rs\" ]\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "You can also add `deps` on other Rust targets. Later we'll use this to " "depend upon third party code." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "You must specify _both_ the crate root, _and_ a full list of sources. The " "`crate_root` is the file given to the Rust compiler representing the root " "file of the compilation unit --- typically `lib.rs`. `sources` is a complete " "list of all source files which `ninja` needs in order to determine when " "rebuilds are necessary." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "(There's no such thing as a Rust `source_set`, because in Rust, an entire " "crate is a compilation unit. A `static_library` is the smallest unit.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Students might be wondering why we need a gn template, rather than using " "[gn's built-in support for Rust static libraries](https://gn.googlesource." "com/gn/+/main/docs/reference.md#func_static_library). The answer is that " "this template provides support for CXX interop, Rust features, and unit " "tests, some of which we'll use later." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/unsafe.md msgid "Including `unsafe` Rust Code" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/unsafe.md msgid "" "Unsafe Rust code is forbidden in `rust_static_library` by default --- it " "won't compile. If you need unsafe Rust code, add `allow_unsafe = true` to " "the gn target. (Later in the course we'll see circumstances where this is " "necessary.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/unsafe.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "import(\"//build/rust/rust_static_library.gni\")\n" "\n" "rust_static_library(\"my_rust_lib\") {\n" " crate_root = \"lib.rs\"\n" " sources = [\n" " \"lib.rs\",\n" " \"hippopotamus.rs\"\n" " ]\n" " allow_unsafe = true\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/depending.md msgid "Simply add the above target to the `deps` of some Chromium C++ target." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/depending.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "import(\"//build/rust/rust_static_library.gni\")\n" "\n" "rust_static_library(\"my_rust_lib\") {\n" " crate_root = \"lib.rs\"\n" " sources = [ \"lib.rs\" ]\n" "}\n" "\n" "# or source_set, static_library etc.\n" "component(\"preexisting_cpp\") {\n" " deps = [ \":my_rust_lib\" ]\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Types are elided in Rust code, which makes a good IDE even more useful than " "for C++. Visual Studio code works well for Rust in Chromium. To use it," msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Ensure your VSCode has the `rust-analyzer` extension, not earlier forms of " "Rust support" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "`gn gen out/Debug --export-rust-project` (or equivalent for your output " "directory)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "`ln -s out/Debug/rust-project.json rust-project.json`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "A demo of some of the code annotation and exploration features of rust-" "analyzer might be beneficial if the audience are naturally skeptical of IDEs." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "The following steps may help with the demo (but feel free to instead use a " "piece of Chromium-related Rust that you are most familiar with):" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "Open `components/qr_code_generator/qr_code_generator_ffi_glue.rs`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Place the cursor over the `QrCode::new` call (around line 26) in " "\\`qr_code_generator_ffi_glue.rs" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Demo **show documentation** (typical bindings: vscode = ctrl k i; vim/CoC = " "K)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Demo **go to definition** (typical bindings: vscode = F12; vim/CoC = g d). " "(This will take you to `//third_party/rust/.../qr_code-.../src/lib.rs`.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Demo **outline** and navigate to the `QrCode::with_bits` method (around line " "164; the outline is in the file explorer pane in vscode; typical vim/CoC " "bindings = space o)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "Demo **type annotations** (there are quote a few nice examples in the " "`QrCode::with_bits` method)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/build-rules/vscode.md msgid "" "It may be worth pointing out that `gn gen ... --export-rust-project` will " "need to be rerun after editing `BUILD.gn` files (which we will do a few " "times throughout the exercises in this session)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "Build rules exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "In your Chromium build, add a new Rust target to `//ui/base/BUILD.gn` " "containing:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "**Important**: note that `no_mangle` here is considered a type of unsafety " "by the Rust compiler, so you'll need to to allow unsafe code in your `gn` " "target." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Add this new Rust target as a dependency of `//ui/base:base`. Declare this " "function at the top of `ui/base/resource/resource_bundle.cc` (later, we'll " "see how this can be automated by bindings generation tools):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Call this function from somewhere in `ui/base/resource/resource_bundle.cc` - " "we suggest the top of `ResourceBundle::MaybeMangleLocalizedString`. Build " "and run Chromium, and ensure that \"Hello from Rust!\" is printed lots of " "times." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "If you use VSCode, now set up Rust to work well in VSCode. It will be useful " "in subsequent exercises. If you've succeeded, you will be able to use right-" "click \"Go to definition\" on `println!`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Where to find help" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "The options available to the [`rust_static_library` gn template](https://" "source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:build/rust/" "rust_static_library.gni;l=16)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Information about [`#[no_mangle]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/beta/reference/" "abi.html#the-no_mangle-attribute)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Information about [`extern \"C\"`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/keyword." "extern.html)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "Information about gn's [`--export-rust-project`](https://gn.googlesource.com/" "gn/+/main/docs/reference.md#compilation-database) switch" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "[How to install rust-analyzer in VSCode](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/" "languages/rust)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "This example is unusual because it boils down to the lowest-common-" "denominator interop language, C. Both C++ and Rust can natively declare and " "call C ABI functions. Later in the course, we'll connect C++ directly to " "Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "`allow_unsafe = true` is required here because `#[no_mangle]` might allow " "Rust to generate two functions with the same name, and Rust can no longer " "guarantee that the right one is called." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/build-rules.md msgid "" "If you need a pure Rust executable, you can also do that using the " "`rust_executable` gn template." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Rust community typically authors unit tests in a module placed in the same " "source file as the code being tested. This was covered [earlier](../testing." "md) in the course and looks like this:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "In Chromium we place unit tests in a separate source file and we continue to " "follow this practice for Rust --- this makes tests consistently discoverable " "and helps to avoid rebuilding `.rs` files a second time (in the `test` " "configuration)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "This results in the following options for testing Rust code in Chromium:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Native Rust tests (i.e. `#[test]`). Discouraged outside of `//third_party/" "rust`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "`gtest` tests authored in C++ and exercising Rust via FFI calls. Sufficient " "when Rust code is just a thin FFI layer and the existing unit tests provide " "sufficient coverage for the feature." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "`gtest` tests authored in Rust and using the crate under test through its " "public API (using `pub mod for_testing { ... }` if needed). This is the " "subject of the next few slides." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Mention that native Rust tests of third-party crates should eventually be " "exercised by Chromium bots. (Such testing is needed rarely --- only after " "adding or updating third-party crates.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Some examples may help illustrate when C++ `gtest` vs Rust `gtest` should be " "used:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "QR has very little functionality in the first-party Rust layer (it's just a " "thin FFI glue) and therefore uses the existing C++ unit tests for testing " "both the C++ and the Rust implementation (parameterizing the tests so they " "enable or disable Rust using a `ScopedFeatureList`)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Hypothetical/WIP PNG integration may need to implement memory-safe " "implementation of pixel transformations that are provided by `libpng` but " "missing in the `png` crate - e.g. RGBA => BGRA, or gamma correction. Such " "functionality may benefit from separate tests authored in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/rust-gtest-interop.md msgid "" "The [`rust_gtest_interop`](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/" "main/testing/rust_gtest_interop/README.md) library provides a way to:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/rust-gtest-interop.md msgid "" "Use a Rust function as a `gtest` testcase (using the `#[gtest(...)]` " "attribute)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/rust-gtest-interop.md msgid "" "Use `expect_eq!` and similar macros (similar to `assert_eq!` but not " "panicking and not terminating the test when the assertion fails)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/rust-gtest-interop.md #, fuzzy msgid "Example:" msgstr "Небольшой пример" #: src/chromium/testing/build-gn.md msgid "" "The simplest way to build Rust `gtest` tests is to add them to an existing " "test binary that already contains tests authored in C++. For example:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/build-gn.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "test(\"ui_base_unittests\") {\n" " ...\n" " sources += [ \"my_rust_lib_unittest.rs\" ]\n" " deps += [ \":my_rust_lib\" ]\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/build-gn.md msgid "" "Authoring Rust tests in a separate `static_library` also works, but requires " "manually declaring the dependency on the support libraries:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/build-gn.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "rust_static_library(\"my_rust_lib_unittests\") {\n" " testonly = true\n" " is_gtest_unittests = true\n" " crate_root = \"my_rust_lib_unittest.rs\"\n" " sources = [ \"my_rust_lib_unittest.rs\" ]\n" " deps = [\n" " \":my_rust_lib\",\n" " \"//testing/rust_gtest_interop\",\n" " ]\n" "}\n" "\n" "test(\"ui_base_unittests\") {\n" " ...\n" " deps += [ \":my_rust_lib_unittests\" ]\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "" "After adding `:my_rust_lib` to GN `deps`, we still need to learn how to " "import and use `my_rust_lib` from `my_rust_lib_unittest.rs`. We haven't " "provided an explicit `crate_name` for `my_rust_lib` so its crate name is " "computed based on the full target path and name. Fortunately we can avoid " "working with such an unwieldy name by using the `chromium::import!` macro " "from the automatically-imported `chromium` crate:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "\"//ui/base:my_rust_lib\"" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "Under the covers the macro expands to something similar to:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "" "More information can be found in [the doc comment](https://source.chromium." "org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:build/rust/chromium_prelude/" "chromium_prelude.rs?q=f:chromium_prelude.rs%20pub.use.*%5Cbimport%5Cb;%20-f:" "third_party&ss=chromium%2Fchromium%2Fsrc) of the `chromium::import` macro." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/testing/chromium-import-macro.md msgid "" "`rust_static_library` supports specifying an explicit name via `crate_name` " "property, but doing this is discouraged. And it is discouraged because the " "crate name has to be globally unique. crates.io guarantees uniqueness of its " "crate names so `cargo_crate` GN targets (generated by the `gnrt` tool " "covered in a later section) use short crate names." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "Testing exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "Time for another exercise!" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "In your Chromium build:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "" "Add a testable function next to `hello_from_rust`. Some suggestions: adding " "two integers received as arguments, computing the nth Fibonacci number, " "summing integers in a slice, etc." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "Add a separate `..._unittest.rs` file with a test for the new function." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "Add the new tests to `BUILD.gn`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/testing.md msgid "Build the tests, run them, and verify that the new test works." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "The Rust community offers multiple options for C++/Rust interop, with new " "tools being developed all the time. At the moment, Chromium uses a tool " "called CXX." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "You describe your whole language boundary in an interface definition " "language (which looks a lot like Rust) and then CXX tools generate " "declarations for functions and types in both Rust and C++." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "See the [CXX tutorial](https://cxx.rs/tutorial.html) for a full example of " "using this." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Talk through the diagram. Explain that behind the scenes, this is doing just " "the same as you previously did. Point out that automating the process has " "the following benefits:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "The tool guarantees that the C++ and Rust sides match (e.g. you get compile " "errors if the `#[cxx::bridge]` doesn't match the actual C++ or Rust " "definitions, but with out-of-sync manual bindings you'd get Undefined " "Behavior)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "The tool automates generation of FFI thunks (small, C-ABI-compatible, free " "functions) for non-C features (e.g. enabling FFI calls into Rust or C++ " "methods; manual bindings would require authoring such top-level, free " "functions manually)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "The tool and the library can handle a set of core types - for example:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "`&[T]` can be passed across the FFI boundary, even though it doesn't " "guarantee any particular ABI or memory layout. With manual bindings `std::" "span` / `&[T]` have to be manually destructured and rebuilt out of a " "pointer and length - this is error-prone given that each language represents " "empty slices slightly differently)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Smart pointers like `std::unique_ptr`, `std::shared_ptr`, and/or `Box` " "are natively supported. With manual bindings, one would have to pass C-ABI-" "compatible raw pointers, which would increase lifetime and memory-safety " "risks." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "`rust::String` and `CxxString` types understand and maintain differences in " "string representation across the languages (e.g. `rust::String::lossy` can " "build a Rust string from non-UTF8 input and `rust::String::c_str` can NUL-" "terminate a string)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "" "CXX requires that the whole C++/Rust boundary is declared in `cxx::bridge` " "modules inside `.rs` source code." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "\"example/include/blobstore.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "// Definitions of Rust types and functions go here\n" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "Point out:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "" "Although this looks like a regular Rust `mod`, the `#[cxx::bridge]` " "procedural macro does complex things to it. The generated code is quite a " "bit more sophisticated - though this does still result in a `mod` called " "`ffi` in your code." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "Native support for C++'s `std::unique_ptr` in Rust" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md #, fuzzy msgid "Native support for Rust slices in C++" msgstr "Встроенная поддержка тестирования." #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "Calls from C++ to Rust, and Rust types (in the top part)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "Calls from Rust to C++, and C++ types (in the bottom part)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/example-bindings.md msgid "" "**Common misconception**: It _looks_ like a C++ header is being parsed by " "Rust, but this is misleading. This header is never interpreted by Rust, but " "simply `#include`d in the generated C++ code for the benefit of C++ " "compilers." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "By far the most useful page when using CXX is the [type reference](https://" "cxx.rs/bindings.html)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "CXX fundamentally suits cases where:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "Your Rust-C++ interface is sufficiently simple that you can declare all of " "it." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "You're using only the types natively supported by CXX already, for example " "`std::unique_ptr`, `std::string`, `&[u8]` etc." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "It has many limitations --- for example lack of support for Rust's `Option` " "type." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "These limitations constrain us to using Rust in Chromium only for well " "isolated \"leaf nodes\" rather than for arbitrary Rust-C++ interop. When " "considering a use-case for Rust in Chromium, a good starting point is to " "draft the CXX bindings for the language boundary to see if it appears simple " "enough." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "You should also discuss some of the other sticky points with CXX, for " "example:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "" "Its error handling is based around C++ exceptions (given on the next slide)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/limitations-of-cxx.md msgid "Function pointers are awkward to use." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "CXX's [support for `Result`](https://cxx.rs/binding/result.html) relies " "on C++ exceptions, so we can't use that in Chromium. Alternatives:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "The `T` part of `Result` can be:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "Returned via out parameters (e.g. via `&mut T`). This requires that `T` can " "be passed across the FFI boundary - for example `T` has to be:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "A primitive type (like `u32` or `usize`)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "A type natively supported by `cxx` (like `UniquePtr`) that has a suitable " "default value to use in a failure case (_unlike_ `Box`)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "Retained on the Rust side, and exposed via reference. This may be needed " "when `T` is a Rust type, which cannot be passed across the FFI boundary, and " "cannot be stored in `UniquePtr`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "The `E` part of `Result` can be:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "Returned as a boolean (e.g. `true` representing success, and `false` " "representing failure)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling.md msgid "" "Preserving error details is in theory possible, but so far hasn't been " "needed in practice." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "CXX Error Handling: QR Example" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "" "The QR code generator is [an example](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/" "chromium/src/+/main:components/qr_code_generator/qr_code_generator_ffi_glue." "rs;l=13-18;drc=7bf1b75b910ca430501b9c6a74c1d18a0223ecca) where a boolean is " "used to communicate success vs failure, and where the successful result can " "be passed across the FFI boundary:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "\"qr_code_generator\"" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "" "Students may be curious about the semantics of the `out_qr_size` output. " "This is not the size of the vector, but the size of the QR code (and " "admittedly it is a bit redundant - this is the square root of the size of " "the vector)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "" "It may be worth pointing out the importance of initializing `out_qr_size` " "before calling into the Rust function. Creation of a Rust reference that " "points to uninitialized memory results in Undefined Behavior (unlike in C++, " "when only the act of dereferencing such memory results in UB)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-qr.md msgid "" "If students ask about `Pin`, then explain why CXX needs it for mutable " "references to C++ data: the answer is that C++ data can’t be moved around " "like Rust data, because it may contain self-referential pointers." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "CXX Error Handling: PNG Example" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "" "A prototype of a PNG decoder illustrates what can be done when the " "successful result cannot be passed across the FFI boundary:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "\"gfx::rust_bindings\"" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "" "/// This returns an FFI-friendly equivalent of `Result,\n" " /// ()>`.\n" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "/// C++ bindings for the `crate::png::ResultOfPngReader` type.\n" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "/// C++ bindings for the `crate::png::PngReader` type.\n" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "" "`PngReader` and `ResultOfPngReader` are Rust types --- objects of these " "types cannot cross the FFI boundary without indirection of a `Box`. We " "can't have an `out_parameter: &mut PngReader`, because CXX doesn't allow C++ " "to store Rust objects by value." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/error-handling-png.md msgid "" "This example illustrates that even though CXX doesn't support arbitrary " "generics nor templates, we can still pass them across the FFI boundary by " "manually specializing / monomorphizing them into a non-generic type. In the " "example `ResultOfPngReader` is a non-generic type that forwards into " "appropriate methods of `Result` (e.g. into `is_err`, `unwrap`, and/or " "`as_mut`)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "Using cxx in Chromium" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "In Chromium, we define an independent `#[cxx::bridge] mod` for each leaf-" "node where we want to use Rust. You'd typically have one for each " "`rust_static_library`. Just add" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "cxx_bindings = [ \"my_rust_file.rs\" ]\n" " # list of files containing #[cxx::bridge], not all source files\n" "allow_unsafe = true\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "to your existing `rust_static_library` target alongside `crate_root` and " "`sources`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "C++ headers will be generated at a sensible location, so you can just" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "\"ui/base/my_rust_file.rs.h\"" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "You will find some utility functions in `//base` to convert to/from Chromium " "C++ types to CXX Rust types --- for example [`SpanToRustSlice`](https://" "source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:base/containers/span_rust.h;" "l=21)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "Students may ask --- why do we still need `allow_unsafe = true`?" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "The broad answer is that no C/C++ code is \"safe\" by the normal Rust " "standards. Calling back and forth to C/C++ from Rust may do arbitrary things " "to memory, and compromise the safety of Rust's own data layouts. Presence of " "_too many_ `unsafe` keywords in C/C++ interop can harm the signal-to-noise " "ratio of such a keyword, and is [controversial](https://steveklabnik.com/" "writing/the-cxx-debate), but strictly, bringing any foreign code into a Rust " "binary can cause unexpected behavior from Rust's perspective." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp/using-cxx-in-chromium.md msgid "" "The narrow answer lies in the diagram at the top of [this page](../" "interoperability-with-cpp.md) --- behind the scenes, CXX generates Rust " "`unsafe` and `extern \"C\"` functions just like we did manually in the " "previous section." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Exercise: Interoperability with C++" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Part one" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "In the Rust file you previously created, add a `#[cxx::bridge]` which " "specifies a single function, to be called from C++, called " "`hello_from_rust`, taking no parameters and returning no value." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Modify your previous `hello_from_rust` function to remove `extern \"C\"` and " "`#[no_mangle]`. This is now just a standard Rust function." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Modify your `gn` target to build these bindings." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "In your C++ code, remove the forward-declaration of `hello_from_rust`. " "Instead, include the generated header file." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Build and run!" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Part two" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "It's a good idea to play with CXX a little. It helps you think about how " "flexible Rust in Chromium actually is." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md #, fuzzy msgid "Some things to try:" msgstr "Примечания:" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Call back into C++ from Rust. You will need:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "An additional header file which you can `include!` from your `cxx::bridge`. " "You'll need to declare your C++ function in that new header file." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "An `unsafe` block to call such a function, or alternatively specify the " "`unsafe` keyword in your `#[cxx::bridge]` [as described here](https://cxx.rs/" "extern-c++.html#functions-and-member-functions)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "You may also need to `#include \"third_party/rust/cxx/v1/crate/include/cxx." "h\"`" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Pass a C++ string from C++ into Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Pass a reference to a C++ object into Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Intentionally get the Rust function signatures mismatched from the `#[cxx::" "bridge]`, and get used to the errors you see." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Intentionally get the C++ function signatures mismatched from the `#[cxx::" "bridge]`, and get used to the errors you see." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Pass a `std::unique_ptr` of some type from C++ into Rust, so that Rust can " "own some C++ object." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Create a Rust object and pass it into C++, so that C++ owns it. (Hint: you " "need a `Box`)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Declare some methods on a C++ type. Call them from Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Declare some methods on a Rust type. Call them from C++." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Part three" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "Now you understand the strengths and limitations of CXX interop, think of a " "couple of use-cases for Rust in Chromium where the interface would be " "sufficiently simple. Sketch how you might define that interface." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "The [`cxx` binding reference](https://cxx.rs/bindings.html)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "The [`rust_static_library` gn template](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/" "chromium/src/+/main:build/rust/rust_static_library.gni;l=16)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "Some of the questions you may encounter:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "I'm seeing a problem initializing a variable of type X with type Y, where X " "and Y are both function types. This is because your C++ function doesn't " "quite match the declaration in your `cxx::bridge`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/interoperability-with-cpp.md msgid "" "I seem to be able to freely convert C++ references into Rust references. " "Doesn't that risk UB? For CXX's _opaque_ types, no, because they are zero-" "sized. For CXX trivial types yes, it's _possible_ to cause UB, although " "CXX's design makes it quite difficult to craft such an example." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "" "Rust libraries are called \"crates\" and are found at [crates.io](https://" "crates.io). It's _very easy_ for Rust crates to depend upon one another. So " "they do!" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "C++ library" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md #, fuzzy msgid "Rust crate" msgstr "Экосистема Rust" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md #, fuzzy msgid "Build system" msgstr "Экосистема Rust" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Lots" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Consistent: `Cargo.toml`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Typical library size" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Large-ish" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Small" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Transitive dependencies" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "Few" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "For a Chromium engineer, this has pros and cons:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "" "All crates use a common build system so we can automate their inclusion into " "Chromium..." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "" "... but, crates typically have transitive dependencies, so you will likely " "have to bring in multiple libraries." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "We'll discuss:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "How to put a crate in the Chromium source code tree" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "How to make `gn` build rules for it" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates.md msgid "How to audit its source code for sufficient safety." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-cargo-toml.md msgid "Configuring the `Cargo.toml` file to add crates" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-cargo-toml.md msgid "" "Chromium has a single set of centrally-managed direct crate dependencies. " "These are managed through a single [`Cargo.toml`](https://source.chromium." "org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:third_party/rust/chromium_crates_io/Cargo." "toml):" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-cargo-toml.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[dependencies]\n" "bitflags = \"1\"\n" "cfg-if = \"1\"\n" "cxx = \"1\"\n" "# lots more...\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-cargo-toml.md msgid "" "As with any other `Cargo.toml`, you can specify [more details about the " "dependencies](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/specifying-" "dependencies.html) --- most commonly, you'll want to specify the `features` " "that you wish to enable in the crate." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-cargo-toml.md msgid "" "When adding a crate to Chromium, you'll often need to provide some extra " "information in an additional file, `gnrt_config.toml`, which we'll meet next." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md msgid "" "Alongside `Cargo.toml` is [`gnrt_config.toml`](https://source.chromium.org/" "chromium/chromium/src/+/main:third_party/rust/chromium_crates_io/gnrt_config." "toml). This contains Chromium-specific extensions to crate handling." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md msgid "" "If you add a new crate, you should specify at least the `group`. This is one " "of:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "For instance," msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md msgid "" "Depending on the crate source code layout, you may also need to use this " "file to specify where its `LICENSE` file(s) can be found." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md msgid "" "Later, we'll see some other things you will need to configure in this file " "to resolve problems." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "" "A tool called `gnrt` knows how to download crates and how to generate `BUILD." "gn` rules." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "To start, download the crate you want like this:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "" "Although the `gnrt` tool is part of the Chromium source code, by running " "this command you will be downloading and running its dependencies from " "`crates.io`. See [the earlier section](../cargo.md) discussing this security " "decision." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "This `vendor` command may download:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "Your crate" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "Direct and transitive dependencies" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "" "New versions of other crates, as required by `cargo` to resolve the complete " "set of crates required by Chromium." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/downloading-crates.md msgid "" "Chromium maintains patches for some crates, kept in `//third_party/rust/" "chromium_crates_io/patches`. These will be reapplied automatically, but if " "patching fails you may need to take manual action." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "" "Once you've downloaded the crate, generate the `BUILD.gn` files like this:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "Now run `git status`. You should find:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "" "At least one new crate source code in `third_party/rust/chromium_crates_io/" "vendor`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "" "At least one new `BUILD.gn` in `third_party/rust//v`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "An appropriate `README.chromium`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "The \"major semver version\" is a [Rust \"semver\" version number](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/semver.html)." msgstr "" "[workspaces](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html)" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "" "Take a close look, especially at the things generated in `third_party/rust`." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/generating-gn-build-rules.md msgid "" "Talk a little about semver --- and specifically the way that in Chromium " "it's to allow multiple incompatible versions of a crate, which is " "discouraged but sometimes necessary in the Cargo ecosystem." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "" "If your build fails, it may be because of a `build.rs`: programs which do " "arbitrary things at build time. This is fundamentally at odds with the " "design of `gn` and `ninja` which aim for static, deterministic, build rules " "to maximize parallelism and repeatability of builds." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "" "Some `build.rs` actions are automatically supported; others require action:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "build script effect" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Supported by our gn templates" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Work required by you" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Checking rustc version to configure features on and off" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "None" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Checking platform or CPU to configure features on and off" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Generating code" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Yes - specify in `gnrt_config.toml`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Building C/C++" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Patch around it" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "Arbitrary other actions" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems.md msgid "" "Fortunately, most crates don't contain a build script, and fortunately, most " "build scripts only do the top two actions." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-generate-code.md msgid "" "If `ninja` complains about missing files, check the `build.rs` to see if it " "writes source code files." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-generate-code.md msgid "" "If so, modify [`gnrt_config.toml`](../configuring-gnrt-config-toml.md) to " "add `build-script-outputs` to the crate. If this is a transitive dependency, " "that is, one on which Chromium code should not directly depend, also add " "`allow-first-party-usage=false`. There are several examples already in that " "file:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-generate-code.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[crate.unicode-linebreak]\n" "allow-first-party-usage = false\n" "build-script-outputs = [\"tables.rs\"]\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-generate-code.md msgid "" "Now rerun [`gnrt.py -- gen`](../generating-gn-build-rules.md) to regenerate " "`BUILD.gn` files to inform ninja that this particular output file is input " "to subsequent build steps." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "" "Some crates use the [`cc`](https://crates.io/crates/cc) crate to build and " "link C/C++ libraries. Other crates parse C/C++ using [`bindgen`](https://" "crates.io/crates/bindgen) within their build scripts. These actions can't be " "supported in a Chromium context --- our gn, ninja and LLVM build system is " "very specific in expressing relationships between build actions." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "So, your options are:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "Avoid these crates" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "Apply a patch to the crate." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/resolving-problems/build-scripts-which-take-arbitrary-actions.md msgid "" "Patches should be kept in `third_party/rust/chromium_crates_io/patches/" "` - see for example the [patches against the `cxx` crate](https://" "source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:third_party/rust/" "chromium_crates_io/patches/cxx/) - and will be applied automatically by " "`gnrt` each time it upgrades the crate." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "" "Once you've added a third-party crate and generated build rules, depending " "on a crate is simple. Find your `rust_static_library` target, and add a " "`dep` on the `:lib` target within your crate." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "Specifically," msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "" "```bob\n" " +------------+ +----------------------+\n" "\"//third_party/rust\" | crate name | \"/v\" | major semver version | \":" "lib\"\n" " +------------+ +----------------------+\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/depending-on-a-crate.md msgid "" "```gn\n" "rust_static_library(\"my_rust_lib\") {\n" " crate_root = \"lib.rs\"\n" " sources = [ \"lib.rs\" ]\n" " deps = [ \"//third_party/rust/example_rust_crate/v1:lib\" ]\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "Auditing Third Party Crates" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Adding new libraries is subject to Chromium's standard [policies](https://" "chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/refs/heads/main/docs/rust." "md#Third_party-review), but of course also subject to security review. As " "you may be bringing in not just a single crate but also transitive " "dependencies, there may be a lot of code to review. On the other hand, safe " "Rust code can have limited negative side effects. How should you review it?" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Over time Chromium aims to move to a process based around [cargo vet]" "(https://mozilla.github.io/cargo-vet/)." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Meanwhile, for each new crate addition, we are checking for the following:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Understand why each crate is used. What's the relationship between crates? " "If the build system for each crate contains a `build.rs` or procedural " "macros, work out what they're for. Are they compatible with the way Chromium " "is normally built?" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "Check each crate seems to be reasonably well maintained" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Use `cd third-party/rust/chromium_crates_io; cargo audit` to check for known " "vulnerabilities (first you'll need to `cargo install cargo-audit`, which " "ironically involves downloading lots of dependencies from the internet[2](../" "cargo.md))" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Ensure any `unsafe` code is good enough for the [Rule of Two](https://" "chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/security/rule-of-2." "md#unsafe-code-in-safe-languages)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "Check for any use of `fs` or `net` APIs" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "Read all the code at a sufficient level to look for anything out of place " "that might have been maliciously inserted. (You can't realistically aim for " "100% perfection here: there's often just too much code.)" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/reviews-and-audits.md msgid "" "These are just guidelines --- work with reviewers from `security@chromium." "org` to work out the right way to become confident of the crate." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "Checking Crates into Chromium Source Code" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "`git status` should reveal:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "Crate code in `//third_party/rust/chromium_crates_io`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "" "Metadata (`BUILD.gn` and `README.chromium`) in `//third_party/rust//" "`" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "Please also add an `OWNERS` file in the latter location." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "" "You should land all this, along with your `Cargo.toml` and `gnrt_config." "toml` changes, into the Chromium repo." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "" "**Important**: you need to use `git add -f` because otherwise `.gitignore` " "files may result in some files being skipped." msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/checking-in.md msgid "" "As you do so, you might find presubmit checks fail because of non-inclusive " "language. This is because Rust crate data tends to include names of git " "branches, and many projects still use non-inclusive terminology there. So " "you may need to run:" msgstr "" #: src/chromium/adding-third-party-crates/keeping-up-to-date.md msgid "" "As the OWNER of any third party Chromium dependency, you are [expected to " "keep it up to date with any security fixes](https://chromium.googlesource." "com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/adding_to_third_party.md#add-owners). It is " "hoped that we will soon automate this for Rust crates, but for now, it's " "still your responsibility just as it is for any other third party dependency." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "" "Add [uwuify](https://crates.io/crates/uwuify) to Chromium, turning off the " "crate's [default features](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/" "features.html#the-default-feature). Assume that the crate will be used in " "shipping Chromium, but won't be used to handle untrustworthy input." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "" "(In the next exercise we'll use uwuify from Chromium, but feel free to skip " "ahead and do that now if you like. Or, you could create a new " "[`rust_executable` target](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/" "+/main:build/rust/rust_executable.gni) which uses `uwuify`)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "Students will need to download lots of transitive dependencies." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "The total crates needed are:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`instant`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`lock_api`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`parking_lot`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`parking_lot_core`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`redox_syscall`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`scopeguard`," msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`smallvec`, and" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "`uwuify`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "" "If students are downloading even more than that, they probably forgot to " "turn off the default features." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/third-party.md msgid "" "Thanks to [Daniel Liu](https://github.com/Daniel-Liu-c0deb0t) for this crate!" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "Bringing It Together --- Exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "In this exercise, you're going to add a whole new Chromium feature, bringing " "together everything you already learned." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "The Brief from Product Management" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "A community of pixies has been discovered living in a remote rainforest. " "It's important that we get Chromium for Pixies delivered to them as soon as " "possible." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "The requirement is to translate all Chromium's UI strings into Pixie " "language." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "There's not time to wait for proper translations, but fortunately pixie " "language is very close to English, and it turns out there's a Rust crate " "which does the translation." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "In fact, you already [imported that crate in the previous exercise](https://" "crates.io/crates/uwuify)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "(Obviously, real translations of Chrome require incredible care and " "diligence. Don't ship this!)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "Steps" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "Modify `ResourceBundle::MaybeMangleLocalizedString` so that it uwuifies all " "strings before display. In this special build of Chromium, it should always " "do this irrespective of the setting of `mangle_localized_strings_`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "If you've done everything right across all these exercises, congratulations, " "you should have created Chrome for pixies!" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "UTF16 vs UTF8. Students should be aware that Rust strings are always UTF8, " "and will probably decide that it's better to do the conversion on the C++ " "side using `base::UTF16ToUTF8` and back again." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "If students decide to do the conversion on the Rust side, they'll need to " "consider [`String::from_utf16`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct." "String.html#method.from_utf16), consider error handling, and consider which " "[CXX supported types can transfer a lot of u16s](https://cxx.rs/binding/" "slice.html)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "Students may design the C++/Rust boundary in several different ways, e.g. " "taking and returning strings by value, or taking a mutable reference to a " "string. If a mutable reference is used, CXX will likely tell the student " "that they need to use [`Pin`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/pin/). You may " "need to explain what `Pin` does, and then explain why CXX needs it for " "mutable references to C++ data: the answer is that C++ data can't be moved " "around like Rust data, because it may contain self-referential pointers." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "The C++ target containing `ResourceBundle::MaybeMangleLocalizedString` will " "need to depend on a `rust_static_library` target. The student probably " "already did this." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/bringing-it-together.md msgid "" "The `rust_static_library` target will need to depend on `//third_party/rust/" "uwuify/v0_2:lib`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/chromium/solutions.md msgid "" "Solutions to the Chromium exercises can be found in [this series of CLs]" "(https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/5096560)." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "Welcome to Bare Metal Rust" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "" "This is a standalone one-day course about bare-metal Rust, aimed at people " "who are familiar with the basics of Rust (perhaps from completing the " "Comprehensive Rust course), and ideally also have some experience with bare-" "metal programming in some other language such as C." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "" "Today we will talk about 'bare-metal' Rust: running Rust code without an OS " "underneath us. This will be divided into several parts:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "What is `no_std` Rust?" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "Writing firmware for microcontrollers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "Writing bootloader / kernel code for application processors." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "Some useful crates for bare-metal Rust development." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "" "For the microcontroller part of the course we will use the [BBC micro:bit]" "(https://microbit.org/) v2 as an example. It's a [development board](https://" "tech.microbit.org/hardware/) based on the Nordic nRF51822 microcontroller " "with some LEDs and buttons, an I2C-connected accelerometer and compass, and " "an on-board SWD debugger." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "" "To get started, install some tools we'll need later. On gLinux or Debian:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md msgid "" "And give users in the `plugdev` group access to the micro:bit programmer:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal.md src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "On MacOS:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`core`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`std`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "Slices, `&str`, `CStr`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`NonZeroU8`..." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Option`, `Result`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Display`, `Debug`, `write!`..." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`panic!`, `assert_eq!`..." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`NonNull` and all the usual pointer-related functions" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Future` and `async`/`await`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`fence`, `AtomicBool`, `AtomicPtr`, `AtomicU32`..." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Duration`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Box`, `Cow`, `Arc`, `Rc`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Vec`, `BinaryHeap`, `BtreeMap`, `LinkedList`, `VecDeque`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`String`, `CString`, `format!`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Error`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Mutex`, `Condvar`, `Barrier`, `Once`, `RwLock`, `mpsc`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`File` and the rest of `fs`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`println!`, `Read`, `Write`, `Stdin`, `Stdout` and the rest of `io`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Path`, `OsString`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`net`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`Command`, `Child`, `ExitCode`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`spawn`, `sleep` and the rest of `thread`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`SystemTime`, `Instant`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`HashMap` depends on RNG." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/no_std.md msgid "`std` re-exports the contents of both `core` and `alloc`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "A minimal `no_std` program" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "This will compile to an empty binary." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "`std` provides a panic handler; without it we must provide our own." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "It can also be provided by another crate, such as `panic-halt`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "" "Depending on the target, you may need to compile with `panic = \"abort\"` to " "avoid an error about `eh_personality`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/minimal.md msgid "" "Note that there is no `main` or any other entry point; it's up to you to " "define your own entry point. This will typically involve a linker script and " "some assembly code to set things up ready for Rust code to run." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "To use `alloc` you must implement a [global (heap) allocator](https://doc." "rust-lang.org/stable/std/alloc/trait.GlobalAlloc.html)." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "// Safe because `HEAP` is only used here and `entry` is only called once.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "// Give the allocator some memory to allocate.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "// Now we can do things that require heap allocation.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "\"A string\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "`buddy_system_allocator` is a third-party crate implementing a basic buddy " "system allocator. Other crates are available, or you can write your own or " "hook into your existing allocator." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "The const parameter of `LockedHeap` is the max order of the allocator; i.e. " "in this case it can allocate regions of up to 2\\*\\*32 bytes." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "If any crate in your dependency tree depends on `alloc` then you must have " "exactly one global allocator defined in your binary. Usually this is done in " "the top-level binary crate." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "" "`extern crate panic_halt as _` is necessary to ensure that the `panic_halt` " "crate is linked in so we get its panic handler." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/alloc.md msgid "This example will build but not run, as it doesn't have an entry point." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers.md msgid "" "The `cortex_m_rt` crate provides (among other things) a reset handler for " "Cortex M microcontrollers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers.md msgid "" "Next we'll look at how to access peripherals, with increasing levels of " "abstraction." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers.md msgid "" "The `cortex_m_rt::entry` macro requires that the function have type `fn() -" "> !`, because returning to the reset handler doesn't make sense." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers.md msgid "Run the example with `cargo embed --bin minimal`" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "" "Most microcontrollers access peripherals via memory-mapped IO. Let's try " "turning on an LED on our micro:bit:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "/// GPIO port 0 peripheral address\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "// GPIO peripheral offsets\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "// PIN_CNF fields\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "// Configure GPIO 0 pins 21 and 28 as push-pull outputs.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "" "// Safe because the pointers are to valid peripheral control registers, and\n" " // no aliases exist.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "// Set pin 28 low and pin 21 high to turn the LED on.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md msgid "" "GPIO 0 pin 21 is connected to the first column of the LED matrix, and pin 28 " "to the first row." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/mmio.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "Run the example with:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "Peripheral Access Crates" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "" "[`svd2rust`](https://crates.io/crates/svd2rust) generates mostly-safe Rust " "wrappers for memory-mapped peripherals from [CMSIS-SVD](https://www.keil.com/" "pack/doc/CMSIS/SVD/html/index.html) files." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "" "SVD (System View Description) files are XML files typically provided by " "silicon vendors which describe the memory map of the device." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "" "They are organised by peripheral, register, field and value, with names, " "descriptions, addresses and so on." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "" "SVD files are often buggy and incomplete, so there are various projects " "which patch the mistakes, add missing details, and publish the generated " "crates." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "`cortex-m-rt` provides the vector table, among other things." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/pacs.md msgid "" "If you `cargo install cargo-binutils` then you can run `cargo objdump --bin " "pac -- -d --no-show-raw-insn` to see the resulting binary." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "HAL crates" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "" "[HAL crates](https://github.com/rust-embedded/awesome-embedded-rust#hal-" "implementation-crates) for many microcontrollers provide wrappers around " "various peripherals. These generally implement traits from [`embedded-hal`]" "(https://crates.io/crates/embedded-hal)." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "// Create HAL wrapper for GPIO port 0.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "" "`set_low` and `set_high` are methods on the `embedded_hal` `OutputPin` trait." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/hals.md msgid "" "HAL crates exist for many Cortex-M and RISC-V devices, including various " "STM32, GD32, nRF, NXP, MSP430, AVR and PIC microcontrollers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "Board support crates" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "" "Board support crates provide a further level of wrapping for a specific " "board for convenience." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "" "In this case the board support crate is just providing more useful names, " "and a bit of initialisation." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "" "The crate may also include drivers for some on-board devices outside of the " "microcontroller itself." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/board-support.md msgid "`microbit-v2` includes a simple driver for the LED matrix." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "The type state pattern" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "// let gpio0_01_again = gpio0.p0_01; // Error, moved.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "// pin_input.is_high(); // Error, moved.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "" "Pins don't implement `Copy` or `Clone`, so only one instance of each can " "exist. Once a pin is moved out of the port struct nobody else can take it." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "" "Changing the configuration of a pin consumes the old pin instance, so you " "can’t keep use the old instance afterwards." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "" "The type of a value indicates the state that it is in: e.g. in this case, " "the configuration state of a GPIO pin. This encodes the state machine into " "the type system, and ensures that you don't try to use a pin in a certain " "way without properly configuring it first. Illegal state transitions are " "caught at compile time." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "" "You can call `is_high` on an input pin and `set_high` on an output pin, but " "not vice-versa." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/type-state.md msgid "Many HAL crates follow this pattern." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "" "The [`embedded-hal`](https://crates.io/crates/embedded-hal) crate provides a " "number of traits covering common microcontroller peripherals." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "GPIO" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "ADC" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "I2C, SPI, UART, CAN" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "RNG" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "Timers" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "Watchdogs" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "" "Other crates then implement [drivers](https://github.com/rust-embedded/" "awesome-embedded-rust#driver-crates) in terms of these traits, e.g. an " "accelerometer driver might need an I2C or SPI bus implementation." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "" "There are implementations for many microcontrollers, as well as other " "platforms such as Linux on Raspberry Pi." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/embedded-hal.md msgid "" "There is work in progress on an `async` version of `embedded-hal`, but it " "isn't stable yet." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "[probe-rs](https://probe.rs/) is a handy toolset for embedded debugging, " "like OpenOCD but better integrated." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "SWD (Serial Wire Debug) and JTAG via CMSIS-DAP, ST-Link and J-Link probes" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "GDB stub and Microsoft DAP (Debug Adapter Protocol) server" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "Cargo integration" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "`cargo-embed` is a cargo subcommand to build and flash binaries, log RTT " "(Real Time Transfers) output and connect GDB. It's configured by an `Embed." "toml` file in your project directory." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "[CMSIS-DAP](https://arm-software.github.io/CMSIS_5/DAP/html/index.html) is " "an Arm standard protocol over USB for an in-circuit debugger to access the " "CoreSight Debug Access Port of various Arm Cortex processors. It's what the " "on-board debugger on the BBC micro:bit uses." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "ST-Link is a range of in-circuit debuggers from ST Microelectronics, J-Link " "is a range from SEGGER." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "The Debug Access Port is usually either a 5-pin JTAG interface or 2-pin " "Serial Wire Debug." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "probe-rs is a library which you can integrate into your own tools if you " "want to." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "The [Microsoft Debug Adapter Protocol](https://microsoft.github.io/debug-" "adapter-protocol/) lets VSCode and other IDEs debug code running on any " "supported microcontroller." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "cargo-embed is a binary built using the probe-rs library." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/probe-rs.md msgid "" "RTT (Real Time Transfers) is a mechanism to transfer data between the debug " "host and the target through a number of ringbuffers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "_Embed.toml_:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "In one terminal under `src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/examples/`:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "In another terminal in the same directory:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "On gLinux or Debian:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/debugging.md msgid "In GDB, try running:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "Other projects" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "[RTIC](https://rtic.rs/)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "\"Real-Time Interrupt-driven Concurrency\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "Shared resource management, message passing, task scheduling, timer queue" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "[Embassy](https://embassy.dev/)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "`async` executors with priorities, timers, networking, USB" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "[TockOS](https://www.tockos.org/documentation/getting-started)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "Security-focused RTOS with preemptive scheduling and Memory Protection Unit " "support" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "[Hubris](https://hubris.oxide.computer/)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "Microkernel RTOS from Oxide Computer Company with memory protection, " "unprivileged drivers, IPC" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "[Bindings for FreeRTOS](https://github.com/lobaro/FreeRTOS-rust)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "Some platforms have `std` implementations, e.g. [esp-idf](https://esp-rs." "github.io/book/overview/using-the-standard-library.html)." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "RTIC can be considered either an RTOS or a concurrency framework." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "It doesn't include any HALs." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "It uses the Cortex-M NVIC (Nested Virtual Interrupt Controller) for " "scheduling rather than a proper kernel." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "Cortex-M only." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "Google uses TockOS on the Haven microcontroller for Titan security keys." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/microcontrollers/other-projects.md msgid "" "FreeRTOS is mostly written in C, but there are Rust bindings for writing " "applications." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/morning.md msgid "" "We will read the direction from an I2C compass, and log the readings to a " "serial port." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/morning.md src/exercises/concurrency/morning.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "After looking at the exercises, you can look at the [solutions](solutions-" "morning.md) provided." msgstr "" "Ознакомившись с упражнениями, вы можете изучить предоставленные " "\\[solutions\\]." #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "We will read the direction from an I2C compass, and log the readings to a " "serial port. If you have time, try displaying it on the LEDs somehow too, or " "use the buttons somehow." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "Hints:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "Check the documentation for the [`lsm303agr`](https://docs.rs/lsm303agr/" "latest/lsm303agr/) and [`microbit-v2`](https://docs.rs/microbit-v2/latest/" "microbit/) crates, as well as the [micro:bit hardware](https://tech.microbit." "org/hardware/)." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "The LSM303AGR Inertial Measurement Unit is connected to the internal I2C bus." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "TWI is another name for I2C, so the I2C master peripheral is called TWIM." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "The LSM303AGR driver needs something implementing the `embedded_hal::" "blocking::i2c::WriteRead` trait. The [`microbit::hal::Twim`](https://docs.rs/" "microbit-v2/latest/microbit/hal/struct.Twim.html) struct implements this." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "You have a [`microbit::Board`](https://docs.rs/microbit-v2/latest/microbit/" "struct.Board.html) struct with fields for the various pins and peripherals." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "You can also look at the [nRF52833 datasheet](https://infocenter.nordicsemi." "com/pdf/nRF52833_PS_v1.5.pdf) if you want, but it shouldn't be necessary for " "this exercise." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "Download the [exercise template](../../comprehensive-rust-exercises.zip) and " "look in the `compass` directory for the following files." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_src/main.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "// Configure serial port.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "// Use the system timer as a delay provider.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "// Set up the I2C controller and Inertial Measurement Unit.\n" " // TODO\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"Ready.\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "// Read compass data and log it to the serial port.\n" " // TODO\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_Cargo.toml_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "_Embed.toml_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_.cargo/config.toml_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "See the serial output on Linux with:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "" "Or on Mac OS something like (the device name may be slightly different):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/compass.md msgid "Use Ctrl+A Ctrl+Q to quit picocom." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "Bare Metal Rust Morning Exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "([back to exercise](compass.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "// Set up the I2C controller and Inertial Measurement Unit.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"Setting up IMU...\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "// Set up display and timer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "// Read compass data and log it to the serial port.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"{},{},{}\\t{},{},{}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-morning.md msgid "" "// If button A is pressed, switch to the next mode and briefly blink all " "LEDs\n" " // on.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps.md msgid "Application processors" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps.md msgid "" "So far we've talked about microcontrollers, such as the Arm Cortex-M series. " "Now let's try writing something for Cortex-A. For simplicity we'll just work " "with QEMU's aarch64 ['virt'](https://qemu-project.gitlab.io/qemu/system/arm/" "virt.html) board." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps.md msgid "" "Broadly speaking, microcontrollers don't have an MMU or multiple levels of " "privilege (exception levels on Arm CPUs, rings on x86), while application " "processors do." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps.md msgid "" "QEMU supports emulating various different machines or board models for each " "architecture. The 'virt' board doesn't correspond to any particular real " "hardware, but is designed purely for virtual machines." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "Before we can start running Rust code, we need to do some initialisation." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "```armasm\n" ".section .init.entry, \"ax\"\n" ".global entry\n" "entry:\n" " /*\n" " * Load and apply the memory management configuration, ready to enable " "MMU and\n" " * caches.\n" " */\n" " adrp x30, idmap\n" " msr ttbr0_el1, x30\n" "\n" " mov_i x30, .Lmairval\n" " msr mair_el1, x30\n" "\n" " mov_i x30, .Ltcrval\n" " /* Copy the supported PA range into TCR_EL1.IPS. */\n" " mrs x29, id_aa64mmfr0_el1\n" " bfi x30, x29, #32, #4\n" "\n" " msr tcr_el1, x30\n" "\n" " mov_i x30, .Lsctlrval\n" "\n" " /*\n" " * Ensure everything before this point has completed, then invalidate " "any\n" " * potentially stale local TLB entries before they start being used.\n" " */\n" " isb\n" " tlbi vmalle1\n" " ic iallu\n" " dsb nsh\n" " isb\n" "\n" " /*\n" " * Configure sctlr_el1 to enable MMU and cache and don't proceed until " "this\n" " * has completed.\n" " */\n" " msr sctlr_el1, x30\n" " isb\n" "\n" " /* Disable trapping floating point access in EL1. */\n" " mrs x30, cpacr_el1\n" " orr x30, x30, #(0x3 << 20)\n" " msr cpacr_el1, x30\n" " isb\n" "\n" " /* Zero out the bss section. */\n" " adr_l x29, bss_begin\n" " adr_l x30, bss_end\n" "0: cmp x29, x30\n" " b.hs 1f\n" " stp xzr, xzr, [x29], #16\n" " b 0b\n" "\n" "1: /* Prepare the stack. */\n" " adr_l x30, boot_stack_end\n" " mov sp, x30\n" "\n" " /* Set up exception vector. */\n" " adr x30, vector_table_el1\n" " msr vbar_el1, x30\n" "\n" " /* Call into Rust code. */\n" " bl main\n" "\n" " /* Loop forever waiting for interrupts. */\n" "2: wfi\n" " b 2b\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "This is the same as it would be for C: initialising the processor state, " "zeroing the BSS, and setting up the stack pointer." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "The BSS (block starting symbol, for historical reasons) is the part of the " "object file which containing statically allocated variables which are " "initialised to zero. They are omitted from the image, to avoid wasting space " "on zeroes. The compiler assumes that the loader will take care of zeroing " "them." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "The BSS may already be zeroed, depending on how memory is initialised and " "the image is loaded, but we zero it to be sure." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "We need to enable the MMU and cache before reading or writing any memory. If " "we don't:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "Unaligned accesses will fault. We build the Rust code for the `aarch64-" "unknown-none` target which sets `+strict-align` to prevent the compiler " "generating unaligned accesses, so it should be fine in this case, but this " "is not necessarily the case in general." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "If it were running in a VM, this can lead to cache coherency issues. The " "problem is that the VM is accessing memory directly with the cache disabled, " "while the host has cacheable aliases to the same memory. Even if the host " "doesn't explicitly access the memory, speculative accesses can lead to cache " "fills, and then changes from one or the other will get lost when the cache " "is cleaned or the VM enables the cache. (Cache is keyed by physical address, " "not VA or IPA.)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "For simplicity, we just use a hardcoded pagetable (see `idmap.S`) which " "identity maps the first 1 GiB of address space for devices, the next 1 GiB " "for DRAM, and another 1 GiB higher up for more devices. This matches the " "memory layout that QEMU uses." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "We also set up the exception vector (`vbar_el1`), which we'll see more about " "later." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/entry-point.md msgid "" "All examples this afternoon assume we will be running at exception level 1 " "(EL1). If you need to run at a different exception level you'll need to " "modify `entry.S` accordingly." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "Inline assembly" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "Sometimes we need to use assembly to do things that aren't possible with " "Rust code. For example, to make an HVC (hypervisor call) to tell the " "firmware to power off the system:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "// Safe because this only uses the declared registers and doesn't do\n" " // anything with memory.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"hvc #0\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w0\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w1\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w2\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w3\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w4\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w5\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w6\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "\"w7\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "(If you actually want to do this, use the [`smccc`](https://crates.io/crates/" "smccc) crate which has wrappers for all these functions.)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "PSCI is the Arm Power State Coordination Interface, a standard set of " "functions to manage system and CPU power states, among other things. It is " "implemented by EL3 firmware and hypervisors on many systems." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "The `0 => _` syntax means initialise the register to 0 before running the " "inline assembly code, and ignore its contents afterwards. We need to use " "`inout` rather than `in` because the call could potentially clobber the " "contents of the registers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "This `main` function needs to be `#[no_mangle]` and `extern \"C\"` because " "it is called from our entry point in `entry.S`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "`_x0`–`_x3` are the values of registers `x0`–`x3`, which are conventionally " "used by the bootloader to pass things like a pointer to the device tree. " "According to the standard aarch64 calling convention (which is what `extern " "\"C\"` specifies to use), registers `x0`–`x7` are used for the first 8 " "arguments passed to a function, so `entry.S` doesn't need to do anything " "special except make sure it doesn't change these registers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/inline-assembly.md msgid "" "Run the example in QEMU with `make qemu_psci` under `src/bare-metal/aps/" "examples`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "Volatile memory access for MMIO" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "Use `pointer::read_volatile` and `pointer::write_volatile`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "Never hold a reference." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "" "`addr_of!` lets you get fields of structs without creating an intermediate " "reference." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "" "Volatile access: read or write operations may have side-effects, so prevent " "the compiler or hardware from reordering, duplicating or eliding them." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "" "Usually if you write and then read, e.g. via a mutable reference, the " "compiler may assume that the value read is the same as the value just " "written, and not bother actually reading memory." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "" "Some existing crates for volatile access to hardware do hold references, but " "this is unsound. Whenever a reference exist, the compiler may choose to " "dereference it." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/mmio.md msgid "" "Use the `addr_of!` macro to get struct field pointers from a pointer to the " "struct." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "Let's write a UART driver" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "" "The QEMU 'virt' machine has a [PL011](https://developer.arm.com/" "documentation/ddi0183/g) UART, so let's write a driver for that." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "/// Minimal driver for a PL011 UART.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md msgid "" "/// Constructs a new instance of the UART driver for a PL011 device at the\n" " /// given base address.\n" " ///\n" " /// # Safety\n" " ///\n" " /// The given base address must point to the 8 MMIO control registers of " "a\n" " /// PL011 device, which must be mapped into the address space of the " "process\n" " /// as device memory and not have any other aliases.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Writes a single byte to the UART.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// Wait until there is room in the TX buffer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "" "// Safe because we know that the base address points to the control\n" " // registers of a PL011 device which is appropriately mapped.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// Write to the TX buffer.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// Wait until the UART is no longer busy.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "" "Note that `Uart::new` is unsafe while the other methods are safe. This is " "because as long as the caller of `Uart::new` guarantees that its safety " "requirements are met (i.e. that there is only ever one instance of the " "driver for a given UART, and nothing else aliasing its address space), then " "it is always safe to call `write_byte` later because we can assume the " "necessary preconditions." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "" "We could have done it the other way around (making `new` safe but " "`write_byte` unsafe), but that would be much less convenient to use as every " "place that calls `write_byte` would need to reason about the safety" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart.md msgid "" "This is a common pattern for writing safe wrappers of unsafe code: moving " "the burden of proof for soundness from a large number of places to a smaller " "number of places." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart/traits.md msgid "More traits" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart/traits.md msgid "" "We derived the `Debug` trait. It would be useful to implement a few more " "traits too." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart/traits.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Safe because it just contains a pointer to device memory, which can be\n" "// accessed from any context.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart/traits.md msgid "" "Implementing `Write` lets us use the `write!` and `writeln!` macros with our " "`Uart` type." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/uart/traits.md msgid "" "Run the example in QEMU with `make qemu_minimal` under `src/bare-metal/aps/" "examples`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "A better UART driver" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "" "The PL011 actually has [a bunch more registers](https://developer.arm.com/" "documentation/ddi0183/g/programmers-model/summary-of-registers), and adding " "offsets to construct pointers to access them is error-prone and hard to " "read. Plus, some of them are bit fields which would be nice to access in a " "structured way." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "Offset" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "Register name" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "Width" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x00" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "DR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "12" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x04" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "RSR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x18" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "FR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "9" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x20" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "ILPR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x24" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "IBRD" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "16" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x28" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "FBRD" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x2c" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "LCR_H" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x30" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "CR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x34" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "IFLS" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x38" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "IMSC" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "11" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x3c" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "RIS" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x40" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "MIS" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x44" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "ICR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "0x48" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "DMACR" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart.md msgid "There are also some ID registers which have been omitted for brevity." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md msgid "" "The [`bitflags`](https://crates.io/crates/bitflags) crate is useful for " "working with bitflags." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Flags from the UART flag register.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Clear to send.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Data set ready.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Data carrier detect.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// UART busy transmitting data.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Receive FIFO is empty.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Transmit FIFO is full.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Receive FIFO is full.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Transmit FIFO is empty.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Ring indicator.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/bitflags.md msgid "" "The `bitflags!` macro creates a newtype something like `Flags(u16)`, along " "with a bunch of method implementations to get and set flags." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/registers.md msgid "Multiple registers" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/registers.md msgid "" "We can use a struct to represent the memory layout of the UART's registers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/registers.md msgid "" "[`#[repr(C)]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/type-layout.html#the-c-" "representation) tells the compiler to lay the struct fields out in order, " "following the same rules as C. This is necessary for our struct to have a " "predictable layout, as default Rust representation allows the compiler to " "(among other things) reorder fields however it sees fit." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md msgid "Now let's use the new `Registers` struct in our driver." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md msgid "/// Driver for a PL011 UART.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "// Safe because we know that self.registers points to the control\n" " // registers of a PL011 device which is appropriately mapped.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "/// Reads and returns a pending byte, or `None` if nothing has been\n" " /// received.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// TODO: Check for error conditions in bits 8-11.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/driver.md msgid "" "Note the use of `addr_of!` / `addr_of_mut!` to get pointers to individual " "fields without creating an intermediate reference, which would be unsound." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md msgid "Using it" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "" "Let's write a small program using our driver to write to the serial console, " "and echo incoming bytes." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Base address of the primary PL011 UART.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Safe because `PL011_BASE_ADDRESS` is the base address of a PL011 device,\n" " // and nothing else accesses that address range.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md msgid "\"main({x0:#x}, {x1:#x}, {x2:#x}, {x3:#x})\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "b'\\r'" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "b'\\n'" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "b'q'" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "\"Bye!\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "" "As in the [inline assembly](../inline-assembly.md) example, this `main` " "function is called from our entry point code in `entry.S`. See the speaker " "notes there for details." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/better-uart/using.md msgid "" "Run the example in QEMU with `make qemu` under `src/bare-metal/aps/examples`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging.md msgid "" "It would be nice to be able to use the logging macros from the [`log`]" "(https://crates.io/crates/log) crate. We can do this by implementing the " "`Log` trait." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"[{}] {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Initialises UART logger.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging.md msgid "" "The unwrap in `log` is safe because we initialise `LOGGER` before calling " "`set_logger`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md msgid "We need to initialise the logger before we use it." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"{info}\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md msgid "Note that our panic handler can now log details of panics." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/logging/using.md msgid "" "Run the example in QEMU with `make qemu_logger` under `src/bare-metal/aps/" "examples`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "" "AArch64 defines an exception vector table with 16 entries, for 4 types of " "exceptions (synchronous, IRQ, FIQ, SError) from 4 states (current EL with " "SP0, current EL with SPx, lower EL using AArch64, lower EL using AArch32). " "We implement this in assembly to save volatile registers to the stack before " "calling into Rust code:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "EL is exception level; all our examples this afternoon run in EL1." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "" "For simplicity we aren't distinguishing between SP0 and SPx for the current " "EL exceptions, or between AArch32 and AArch64 for the lower EL exceptions." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "" "For this example we just log the exception and power down, as we don't " "expect any of them to actually happen." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/exceptions.md msgid "" "We can think of exception handlers and our main execution context more or " "less like different threads. [`Send` and `Sync`](../../concurrency/send-sync." "md) will control what we can share between them, just like with threads. For " "example, if we want to share some value between exception handlers and the " "rest of the program, and it's `Send` but not `Sync`, then we'll need to wrap " "it in something like a `Mutex` and put it in a static." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "[oreboot](https://github.com/oreboot/oreboot)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "\"coreboot without the C\"" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "Supports x86, aarch64 and RISC-V." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "Relies on LinuxBoot rather than having many drivers itself." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "[Rust RaspberryPi OS tutorial](https://github.com/rust-embedded/rust-" "raspberrypi-OS-tutorials)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "Initialisation, UART driver, simple bootloader, JTAG, exception levels, " "exception handling, page tables" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "Some dodginess around cache maintenance and initialisation in Rust, not " "necessarily a good example to copy for production code." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "[`cargo-call-stack`](https://crates.io/crates/cargo-call-stack)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "Static analysis to determine maximum stack usage." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "The RaspberryPi OS tutorial runs Rust code before the MMU and caches are " "enabled. This will read and write memory (e.g. the stack). However:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "Without the MMU and cache, unaligned accesses will fault. It builds with " "`aarch64-unknown-none` which sets `+strict-align` to prevent the compiler " "generating unaligned accesses so it should be alright, but this is not " "necessarily the case in general." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/aps/other-projects.md msgid "" "If it were running in a VM, this can lead to cache coherency issues. The " "problem is that the VM is accessing memory directly with the cache disabled, " "while the host has cacheable aliases to the same memory. Even if the host " "doesn't explicitly access the memory, speculative accesses can lead to cache " "fills, and then changes from one or the other will get lost. Again this is " "alright in this particular case (running directly on the hardware with no " "hypervisor), but isn't a good pattern in general." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates.md msgid "Useful crates" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates.md msgid "" "We'll go over a few crates which solve some common problems in bare-metal " "programming." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "The [`zerocopy`](https://docs.rs/zerocopy/) crate (from Fuchsia) provides " "traits and macros for safely converting between byte sequences and other " "types." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "This is not suitable for MMIO (as it doesn't use volatile reads and writes), " "but can be useful for working with structures shared with hardware e.g. by " "DMA, or sent over some external interface." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "`FromBytes` can be implemented for types for which any byte pattern is " "valid, and so can safely be converted from an untrusted sequence of bytes." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "Attempting to derive `FromBytes` for these types would fail, because " "`RequestType` doesn't use all possible u32 values as discriminants, so not " "all byte patterns are valid." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "`zerocopy::byteorder` has types for byte-order aware numeric primitives." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/zerocopy.md msgid "" "Run the example with `cargo run` under `src/bare-metal/useful-crates/" "zerocopy-example/`. (It won't run in the Playground because of the crate " "dependency.)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "" "The [`aarch64-paging`](https://crates.io/crates/aarch64-paging) crate lets " "you create page tables according to the AArch64 Virtual Memory System " "Architecture." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "// Create a new page table with identity mapping.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "// Map a 2 MiB region of memory as read-only.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "// Set `TTBR0_EL1` to activate the page table.\n" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "" "For now it only supports EL1, but support for other exception levels should " "be straightforward to add." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "" "This is used in Android for the [Protected VM Firmware](https://cs.android." "com/android/platform/superproject/+/master:packages/modules/Virtualization/" "pvmfw/)." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/aarch64-paging.md msgid "" "There's no easy way to run this example, as it needs to run on real hardware " "or under QEMU." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/buddy_system_allocator.md msgid "" "[`buddy_system_allocator`](https://crates.io/crates/buddy_system_allocator) " "is a third-party crate implementing a basic buddy system allocator. It can " "be used both for [`LockedHeap`](https://docs.rs/buddy_system_allocator/0.9.0/" "buddy_system_allocator/struct.LockedHeap.html) implementing [`GlobalAlloc`]" "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/alloc/trait.GlobalAlloc.html) so you can use " "the standard `alloc` crate (as we saw [before](../alloc.md)), or for " "allocating other address space. For example, we might want to allocate MMIO " "space for PCI BARs:" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/buddy_system_allocator.md msgid "PCI BARs always have alignment equal to their size." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/buddy_system_allocator.md msgid "" "Run the example with `cargo run` under `src/bare-metal/useful-crates/" "allocator-example/`. (It won't run in the Playground because of the crate " "dependency.)" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/tinyvec.md msgid "" "Sometimes you want something which can be resized like a `Vec`, but without " "heap allocation. [`tinyvec`](https://crates.io/crates/tinyvec) provides " "this: a vector backed by an array or slice, which could be statically " "allocated or on the stack, which keeps track of how many elements are used " "and panics if you try to use more than are allocated." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/tinyvec.md msgid "" "`tinyvec` requires that the element type implement `Default` for " "initialisation." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/tinyvec.md msgid "" "The Rust Playground includes `tinyvec`, so this example will run fine inline." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "" "`std::sync::Mutex` and the other synchronisation primitives from `std::sync` " "are not available in `core` or `alloc`. How can we manage synchronisation or " "interior mutability, such as for sharing state between different CPUs?" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "" "The [`spin`](https://crates.io/crates/spin) crate provides spinlock-based " "equivalents of many of these primitives." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "Be careful to avoid deadlock if you take locks in interrupt handlers." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "" "`spin` also has a ticket lock mutex implementation; equivalents of `RwLock`, " "`Barrier` and `Once` from `std::sync`; and `Lazy` for lazy initialisation." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "" "The [`once_cell`](https://crates.io/crates/once_cell) crate also has some " "useful types for late initialisation with a slightly different approach to " "`spin::once::Once`." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/useful-crates/spin.md msgid "" "The Rust Playground includes `spin`, so this example will run fine inline." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/android.md msgid "" "To build a bare-metal Rust binary in AOSP, you need to use a " "`rust_ffi_static` Soong rule to build your Rust code, then a `cc_binary` " "with a linker script to produce the binary itself, and then a `raw_binary` " "to convert the ELF to a raw binary ready to be run." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/android/vmbase.md msgid "vmbase" msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/android/vmbase.md msgid "" "For VMs running under crosvm on aarch64, the [vmbase](https://android." "googlesource.com/platform/packages/modules/Virtualization/+/refs/heads/" "master/vmbase/) library provides a linker script and useful defaults for the " "build rules, along with an entry point, UART console logging and more." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/android/vmbase.md msgid "" "The `main!` macro marks your main function, to be called from the `vmbase` " "entry point." msgstr "" #: src/bare-metal/android/vmbase.md msgid "" "The `vmbase` entry point handles console initialisation, and issues a " "PSCI_SYSTEM_OFF to shutdown the VM if your main function returns." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/afternoon.md msgid "We will write a driver for the PL031 real-time clock device." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/afternoon.md src/exercises/concurrency/afternoon.md #, fuzzy msgid "" "After looking at the exercises, you can look at the [solutions](solutions-" "afternoon.md) provided." msgstr "" "Ознакомившись с упражнениями, вы можете изучить предоставленные " "\\[solutions\\]." #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "RTC driver" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "The QEMU aarch64 virt machine has a [PL031](https://developer.arm.com/" "documentation/ddi0224/c) real-time clock at 0x9010000. For this exercise, " "you should write a driver for it." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "Use it to print the current time to the serial console. You can use the " "[`chrono`](https://crates.io/crates/chrono) crate for date/time formatting." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "Use the match register and raw interrupt status to busy-wait until a given " "time, e.g. 3 seconds in the future. (Call [`core::hint::spin_loop`](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/core/hint/fn.spin_loop.html) inside the loop.)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "_Extension if you have time:_ Enable and handle the interrupt generated by " "the RTC match. You can use the driver provided in the [`arm-gic`](https://" "docs.rs/arm-gic/) crate to configure the Arm Generic Interrupt Controller." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "Use the RTC interrupt, which is wired to the GIC as `IntId::spi(2)`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "Once the interrupt is enabled, you can put the core to sleep via `arm_gic::" "wfi()`, which will cause the core to sleep until it receives an interrupt." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "Download the [exercise template](../../comprehensive-rust-exercises.zip) and " "look in the `rtc` directory for the following files." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Base addresses of the GICv3.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"main({:#x}, {:#x}, {:#x}, {:#x})\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Safe because `GICD_BASE_ADDRESS` and `GICR_BASE_ADDRESS` are the base\n" " // addresses of a GICv3 distributor and redistributor respectively, and\n" " // nothing else accesses those address ranges.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// TODO: Create instance of RTC driver and print current time.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// TODO: Wait for 3 seconds.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "_src/exceptions.rs_ (you should only need to change this for the 3rd part of " "the exercise):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "// Copyright 2023 Google LLC\n" "//\n" "// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n" "// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n" "// You may obtain a copy of the License at\n" "//\n" "// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n" "//\n" "// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n" "// distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n" "// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n" "// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n" "// limitations under the License.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"sync_exception_current\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"irq_current\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"No pending interrupt\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"IRQ {intid:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"fiq_current\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"serr_current\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"sync_lower\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"irq_lower\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"fiq_lower\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"serr_lower\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_src/logger.rs_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR: main\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_src/pl011.rs_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR: Flags\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR_END: Flags\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "/// Flags from the UART Receive Status Register / Error Clear Register.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Framing error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Parity error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Break error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "/// Overrun error.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR: Registers\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR_END: Registers\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "// ANCHOR: Uart\n" "/// Driver for a PL011 UART.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "/// Constructs a new instance of the UART driver for a PL011 device at the\n" " /// given base address.\n" " ///\n" " /// # Safety\n" " ///\n" " /// The given base address must point to the MMIO control registers of " "a\n" " /// PL011 device, which must be mapped into the address space of the " "process\n" " /// as device memory and not have any other aliases.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "// ANCHOR_END: Uart\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_build.rs_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"linux\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"CROSS_COMPILE\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"aarch64-linux-gnu\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"aarch64-none-elf\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"entry.S\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"exceptions.S\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"idmap.S\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "\"empty\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_entry.S_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "```armasm\n" "/*\n" " * Copyright 2023 Google LLC\n" " *\n" " * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n" " * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n" " * You may obtain a copy of the License at\n" " *\n" " * https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n" " *\n" " * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n" " * distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n" " * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n" " * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n" " * limitations under the License.\n" " */\n" "\n" ".macro adr_l, reg:req, sym:req\n" "\tadrp \\reg, \\sym\n" "\tadd \\reg, \\reg, :lo12:\\sym\n" ".endm\n" "\n" ".macro mov_i, reg:req, imm:req\n" "\tmovz \\reg, :abs_g3:\\imm\n" "\tmovk \\reg, :abs_g2_nc:\\imm\n" "\tmovk \\reg, :abs_g1_nc:\\imm\n" "\tmovk \\reg, :abs_g0_nc:\\imm\n" ".endm\n" "\n" ".set .L_MAIR_DEV_nGnRE,\t0x04\n" ".set .L_MAIR_MEM_WBWA,\t0xff\n" ".set .Lmairval, .L_MAIR_DEV_nGnRE | (.L_MAIR_MEM_WBWA << 8)\n" "\n" "/* 4 KiB granule size for TTBR0_EL1. */\n" ".set .L_TCR_TG0_4KB, 0x0 << 14\n" "/* 4 KiB granule size for TTBR1_EL1. */\n" ".set .L_TCR_TG1_4KB, 0x2 << 30\n" "/* Disable translation table walk for TTBR1_EL1, generating a translation " "fault instead. */\n" ".set .L_TCR_EPD1, 0x1 << 23\n" "/* Translation table walks for TTBR0_EL1 are inner sharable. */\n" ".set .L_TCR_SH_INNER, 0x3 << 12\n" "/*\n" " * Translation table walks for TTBR0_EL1 are outer write-back read-allocate " "write-allocate\n" " * cacheable.\n" " */\n" ".set .L_TCR_RGN_OWB, 0x1 << 10\n" "/*\n" " * Translation table walks for TTBR0_EL1 are inner write-back read-allocate " "write-allocate\n" " * cacheable.\n" " */\n" ".set .L_TCR_RGN_IWB, 0x1 << 8\n" "/* Size offset for TTBR0_EL1 is 2**39 bytes (512 GiB). */\n" ".set .L_TCR_T0SZ_512, 64 - 39\n" ".set .Ltcrval, .L_TCR_TG0_4KB | .L_TCR_TG1_4KB | .L_TCR_EPD1 | ." "L_TCR_RGN_OWB\n" ".set .Ltcrval, .Ltcrval | .L_TCR_RGN_IWB | .L_TCR_SH_INNER | ." "L_TCR_T0SZ_512\n" "\n" "/* Stage 1 instruction access cacheability is unaffected. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_ELx_I, 0x1 << 12\n" "/* SP alignment fault if SP is not aligned to a 16 byte boundary. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_ELx_SA, 0x1 << 3\n" "/* Stage 1 data access cacheability is unaffected. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_ELx_C, 0x1 << 2\n" "/* EL0 and EL1 stage 1 MMU enabled. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_ELx_M, 0x1 << 0\n" "/* Privileged Access Never is unchanged on taking an exception to EL1. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_EL1_SPAN, 0x1 << 23\n" "/* SETEND instruction disabled at EL0 in aarch32 mode. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_EL1_SED, 0x1 << 8\n" "/* Various IT instructions are disabled at EL0 in aarch32 mode. */\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_EL1_ITD, 0x1 << 7\n" ".set .L_SCTLR_EL1_RES1, (0x1 << 11) | (0x1 << 20) | (0x1 << 22) | (0x1 << " "28) | (0x1 << 29)\n" ".set .Lsctlrval, .L_SCTLR_ELx_M | .L_SCTLR_ELx_C | .L_SCTLR_ELx_SA | ." "L_SCTLR_EL1_ITD | .L_SCTLR_EL1_SED\n" ".set .Lsctlrval, .Lsctlrval | .L_SCTLR_ELx_I | .L_SCTLR_EL1_SPAN | ." "L_SCTLR_EL1_RES1\n" "\n" "/**\n" " * This is a generic entry point for an image. It carries out the operations " "required to prepare the\n" " * loaded image to be run. Specifically, it zeroes the bss section using " "registers x25 and above,\n" " * prepares the stack, enables floating point, and sets up the exception " "vector. It preserves x0-x3\n" " * for the Rust entry point, as these may contain boot parameters.\n" " */\n" ".section .init.entry, \"ax\"\n" ".global entry\n" "entry:\n" "\t/* Load and apply the memory management configuration, ready to enable MMU " "and caches. */\n" "\tadrp x30, idmap\n" "\tmsr ttbr0_el1, x30\n" "\n" "\tmov_i x30, .Lmairval\n" "\tmsr mair_el1, x30\n" "\n" "\tmov_i x30, .Ltcrval\n" "\t/* Copy the supported PA range into TCR_EL1.IPS. */\n" "\tmrs x29, id_aa64mmfr0_el1\n" "\tbfi x30, x29, #32, #4\n" "\n" "\tmsr tcr_el1, x30\n" "\n" "\tmov_i x30, .Lsctlrval\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Ensure everything before this point has completed, then invalidate any " "potentially stale\n" "\t * local TLB entries before they start being used.\n" "\t */\n" "\tisb\n" "\ttlbi vmalle1\n" "\tic iallu\n" "\tdsb nsh\n" "\tisb\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Configure sctlr_el1 to enable MMU and cache and don't proceed until " "this has completed.\n" "\t */\n" "\tmsr sctlr_el1, x30\n" "\tisb\n" "\n" "\t/* Disable trapping floating point access in EL1. */\n" "\tmrs x30, cpacr_el1\n" "\torr x30, x30, #(0x3 << 20)\n" "\tmsr cpacr_el1, x30\n" "\tisb\n" "\n" "\t/* Zero out the bss section. */\n" "\tadr_l x29, bss_begin\n" "\tadr_l x30, bss_end\n" "0:\tcmp x29, x30\n" "\tb.hs 1f\n" "\tstp xzr, xzr, [x29], #16\n" "\tb 0b\n" "\n" "1:\t/* Prepare the stack. */\n" "\tadr_l x30, boot_stack_end\n" "\tmov sp, x30\n" "\n" "\t/* Set up exception vector. */\n" "\tadr x30, vector_table_el1\n" "\tmsr vbar_el1, x30\n" "\n" "\t/* Call into Rust code. */\n" "\tbl main\n" "\n" "\t/* Loop forever waiting for interrupts. */\n" "2:\twfi\n" "\tb 2b\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_exceptions.S_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "```armasm\n" "/*\n" " * Copyright 2023 Google LLC\n" " *\n" " * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n" " * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n" " * You may obtain a copy of the License at\n" " *\n" " * https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n" " *\n" " * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n" " * distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n" " * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n" " * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n" " * limitations under the License.\n" " */\n" "\n" "/**\n" " * Saves the volatile registers onto the stack. This currently takes 14\n" " * instructions, so it can be used in exception handlers with 18 " "instructions\n" " * left.\n" " *\n" " * On return, x0 and x1 are initialised to elr_el2 and spsr_el2 " "respectively,\n" " * which can be used as the first and second arguments of a subsequent " "call.\n" " */\n" ".macro save_volatile_to_stack\n" "\t/* Reserve stack space and save registers x0-x18, x29 & x30. */\n" "\tstp x0, x1, [sp, #-(8 * 24)]!\n" "\tstp x2, x3, [sp, #8 * 2]\n" "\tstp x4, x5, [sp, #8 * 4]\n" "\tstp x6, x7, [sp, #8 * 6]\n" "\tstp x8, x9, [sp, #8 * 8]\n" "\tstp x10, x11, [sp, #8 * 10]\n" "\tstp x12, x13, [sp, #8 * 12]\n" "\tstp x14, x15, [sp, #8 * 14]\n" "\tstp x16, x17, [sp, #8 * 16]\n" "\tstr x18, [sp, #8 * 18]\n" "\tstp x29, x30, [sp, #8 * 20]\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Save elr_el1 & spsr_el1. This such that we can take nested exception\n" "\t * and still be able to unwind.\n" "\t */\n" "\tmrs x0, elr_el1\n" "\tmrs x1, spsr_el1\n" "\tstp x0, x1, [sp, #8 * 22]\n" ".endm\n" "\n" "/**\n" " * Restores the volatile registers from the stack. This currently takes 14\n" " * instructions, so it can be used in exception handlers while still leaving " "18\n" " * instructions left; if paired with save_volatile_to_stack, there are 4\n" " * instructions to spare.\n" " */\n" ".macro restore_volatile_from_stack\n" "\t/* Restore registers x2-x18, x29 & x30. */\n" "\tldp x2, x3, [sp, #8 * 2]\n" "\tldp x4, x5, [sp, #8 * 4]\n" "\tldp x6, x7, [sp, #8 * 6]\n" "\tldp x8, x9, [sp, #8 * 8]\n" "\tldp x10, x11, [sp, #8 * 10]\n" "\tldp x12, x13, [sp, #8 * 12]\n" "\tldp x14, x15, [sp, #8 * 14]\n" "\tldp x16, x17, [sp, #8 * 16]\n" "\tldr x18, [sp, #8 * 18]\n" "\tldp x29, x30, [sp, #8 * 20]\n" "\n" "\t/* Restore registers elr_el1 & spsr_el1, using x0 & x1 as scratch. */\n" "\tldp x0, x1, [sp, #8 * 22]\n" "\tmsr elr_el1, x0\n" "\tmsr spsr_el1, x1\n" "\n" "\t/* Restore x0 & x1, and release stack space. */\n" "\tldp x0, x1, [sp], #8 * 24\n" ".endm\n" "\n" "/**\n" " * This is a generic handler for exceptions taken at the current EL while " "using\n" " * SP0. It behaves similarly to the SPx case by first switching to SPx, " "doing\n" " * the work, then switching back to SP0 before returning.\n" " *\n" " * Switching to SPx and calling the Rust handler takes 16 instructions. To\n" " * restore and return we need an additional 16 instructions, so we can " "implement\n" " * the whole handler within the allotted 32 instructions.\n" " */\n" ".macro current_exception_sp0 handler:req\n" "\tmsr spsel, #1\n" "\tsave_volatile_to_stack\n" "\tbl \\handler\n" "\trestore_volatile_from_stack\n" "\tmsr spsel, #0\n" "\teret\n" ".endm\n" "\n" "/**\n" " * This is a generic handler for exceptions taken at the current EL while " "using\n" " * SPx. It saves volatile registers, calls the Rust handler, restores " "volatile\n" " * registers, then returns.\n" " *\n" " * This also works for exceptions taken from EL0, if we don't care about\n" " * non-volatile registers.\n" " *\n" " * Saving state and jumping to the Rust handler takes 15 instructions, and\n" " * restoring and returning also takes 15 instructions, so we can fit the " "whole\n" " * handler in 30 instructions, under the limit of 32.\n" " */\n" ".macro current_exception_spx handler:req\n" "\tsave_volatile_to_stack\n" "\tbl \\handler\n" "\trestore_volatile_from_stack\n" "\teret\n" ".endm\n" "\n" ".section .text.vector_table_el1, \"ax\"\n" ".global vector_table_el1\n" ".balign 0x800\n" "vector_table_el1:\n" "sync_cur_sp0:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_sp0 sync_exception_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "irq_cur_sp0:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_sp0 irq_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "fiq_cur_sp0:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_sp0 fiq_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "serr_cur_sp0:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_sp0 serr_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "sync_cur_spx:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx sync_exception_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "irq_cur_spx:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx irq_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "fiq_cur_spx:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx fiq_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "serr_cur_spx:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx serr_current\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "sync_lower_64:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx sync_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "irq_lower_64:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx irq_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "fiq_lower_64:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx fiq_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "serr_lower_64:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx serr_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "sync_lower_32:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx sync_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "irq_lower_32:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx irq_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "fiq_lower_32:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx fiq_lower\n" "\n" ".balign 0x80\n" "serr_lower_32:\n" "\tcurrent_exception_spx serr_lower\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_idmap.S_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "```armasm\n" "/*\n" " * Copyright 2023 Google LLC\n" " *\n" " * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n" " * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n" " * You may obtain a copy of the License at\n" " *\n" " * https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n" " *\n" " * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n" " * distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n" " * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n" " * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n" " * limitations under the License.\n" " */\n" "\n" ".set .L_TT_TYPE_BLOCK, 0x1\n" ".set .L_TT_TYPE_PAGE, 0x3\n" ".set .L_TT_TYPE_TABLE, 0x3\n" "\n" "/* Access flag. */\n" ".set .L_TT_AF, 0x1 << 10\n" "/* Not global. */\n" ".set .L_TT_NG, 0x1 << 11\n" ".set .L_TT_XN, 0x3 << 53\n" "\n" ".set .L_TT_MT_DEV, 0x0 << 2\t\t\t// MAIR #0 (DEV_nGnRE)\n" ".set .L_TT_MT_MEM, (0x1 << 2) | (0x3 << 8)\t// MAIR #1 (MEM_WBWA), inner " "shareable\n" "\n" ".set .L_BLOCK_DEV, .L_TT_TYPE_BLOCK | .L_TT_MT_DEV | .L_TT_AF | .L_TT_XN\n" ".set .L_BLOCK_MEM, .L_TT_TYPE_BLOCK | .L_TT_MT_MEM | .L_TT_AF | .L_TT_NG\n" "\n" ".section \".rodata.idmap\", \"a\", %progbits\n" ".global idmap\n" ".align 12\n" "idmap:\n" "\t/* level 1 */\n" "\t.quad\t\t.L_BLOCK_DEV | 0x0\t\t // 1 GiB of device mappings\n" "\t.quad\t\t.L_BLOCK_MEM | 0x40000000\t// 1 GiB of DRAM\n" "\t.fill\t\t254, 8, 0x0\t\t\t// 254 GiB of unmapped VA space\n" "\t.quad\t\t.L_BLOCK_DEV | 0x4000000000 // 1 GiB of device mappings\n" "\t.fill\t\t255, 8, 0x0\t\t\t// 255 GiB of remaining VA space\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_image.ld_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "" "```ld\n" "/*\n" " * Copyright 2023 Google LLC\n" " *\n" " * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n" " * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n" " * You may obtain a copy of the License at\n" " *\n" " * https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n" " *\n" " * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n" " * distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n" " * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n" " * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n" " * limitations under the License.\n" " */\n" "\n" "/*\n" " * Code will start running at this symbol which is placed at the start of " "the\n" " * image.\n" " */\n" "ENTRY(entry)\n" "\n" "MEMORY\n" "{\n" "\timage : ORIGIN = 0x40080000, LENGTH = 2M\n" "}\n" "\n" "SECTIONS\n" "{\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Collect together the code.\n" "\t */\n" "\t.init : ALIGN(4096) {\n" "\t\ttext_begin = .;\n" "\t\t*(.init.entry)\n" "\t\t*(.init.*)\n" "\t} >image\n" "\t.text : {\n" "\t\t*(.text.*)\n" "\t} >image\n" "\ttext_end = .;\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Collect together read-only data.\n" "\t */\n" "\t.rodata : ALIGN(4096) {\n" "\t\trodata_begin = .;\n" "\t\t*(.rodata.*)\n" "\t} >image\n" "\t.got : {\n" "\t\t*(.got)\n" "\t} >image\n" "\trodata_end = .;\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Collect together the read-write data including .bss at the end which\n" "\t * will be zero'd by the entry code.\n" "\t */\n" "\t.data : ALIGN(4096) {\n" "\t\tdata_begin = .;\n" "\t\t*(.data.*)\n" "\t\t/*\n" "\t\t * The entry point code assumes that .data is a multiple of 32\n" "\t\t * bytes long.\n" "\t\t */\n" "\t\t. = ALIGN(32);\n" "\t\tdata_end = .;\n" "\t} >image\n" "\n" "\t/* Everything beyond this point will not be included in the binary. */\n" "\tbin_end = .;\n" "\n" "\t/* The entry point code assumes that .bss is 16-byte aligned. */\n" "\t.bss : ALIGN(16) {\n" "\t\tbss_begin = .;\n" "\t\t*(.bss.*)\n" "\t\t*(COMMON)\n" "\t\t. = ALIGN(16);\n" "\t\tbss_end = .;\n" "\t} >image\n" "\n" "\t.stack (NOLOAD) : ALIGN(4096) {\n" "\t\tboot_stack_begin = .;\n" "\t\t. += 40 * 4096;\n" "\t\t. = ALIGN(4096);\n" "\t\tboot_stack_end = .;\n" "\t} >image\n" "\n" "\t. = ALIGN(4K);\n" "\tPROVIDE(dma_region = .);\n" "\n" "\t/*\n" "\t * Remove unused sections from the image.\n" "\t */\n" "\t/DISCARD/ : {\n" "\t\t/* The image loads itself so doesn't need these sections. */\n" "\t\t*(.gnu.hash)\n" "\t\t*(.hash)\n" "\t\t*(.interp)\n" "\t\t*(.eh_frame_hdr)\n" "\t\t*(.eh_frame)\n" "\t\t*(.note.gnu.build-id)\n" "\t}\n" "}\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "_Makefile_ (you shouldn't need to change this):" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "# Copyright 2023 Google LLC" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "$(shell uname -s)" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "aarch64-linux-gnu" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "stdio -display none -kernel $< -s" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "cargo clean" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/rtc.md msgid "Run the code in QEMU with `make qemu`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "Bare Metal Rust Afternoon" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "([back to exercise](rtc.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "_main.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Base address of the PL031 RTC.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// The IRQ used by the PL031 RTC.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Safe because `PL031_BASE_ADDRESS` is the base address of a PL031 device,\n" " // and nothing else accesses that address range.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"RTC: {time}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Wait for 3 seconds, without interrupts.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Waiting for {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"matched={}, interrupt_pending={}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Finished waiting\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Wait another 3 seconds for an interrupt.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "_pl031.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Data register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Match register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Load register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Control register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Interrupt Mask Set or Clear register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Raw Interrupt Status\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Masked Interrupt Status\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Interrupt Clear Register\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Driver for a PL031 real-time clock.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "/// Constructs a new instance of the RTC driver for a PL031 device at the\n" " /// given base address.\n" " ///\n" " /// # Safety\n" " ///\n" " /// The given base address must point to the MMIO control registers of " "a\n" " /// PL031 device, which must be mapped into the address space of the " "process\n" " /// as device memory and not have any other aliases.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Reads the current RTC value.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Safe because we know that self.registers points to the control\n" " // registers of a PL031 device which is appropriately mapped.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "/// Writes a match value. When the RTC value matches this then an interrupt\n" " /// will be generated (if it is enabled).\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "/// Returns whether the match register matches the RTC value, whether or " "not\n" " /// the interrupt is enabled.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "/// Returns whether there is currently an interrupt pending.\n" " ///\n" " /// This should be true if and only if `matched` returns true and the\n" " /// interrupt is masked.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "/// Sets or clears the interrupt mask.\n" " ///\n" " /// When the mask is true the interrupt is enabled; when it is false " "the\n" " /// interrupt is disabled.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/bare-metal/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "/// Clears a pending interrupt, if any.\n" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency.md msgid "Welcome to Concurrency in Rust" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency.md msgid "" "Rust has full support for concurrency using OS threads with mutexes and " "channels." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency.md msgid "" "The Rust type system plays an important role in making many concurrency bugs " "compile time bugs. This is often referred to as _fearless concurrency_ since " "you can rely on the compiler to ensure correctness at runtime." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Rust threads work similarly to threads in other languages:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "\"Count in thread: {i}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "\"Main thread: {i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Threads are all daemon threads, the main thread does not wait for them." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Thread panics are independent of each other." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Panics can carry a payload, which can be unpacked with `downcast_ref`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "" "Notice that the thread is stopped before it reaches 10 --- the main thread " "is not waiting." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "" "Use `let handle = thread::spawn(...)` and later `handle.join()` to wait for " "the thread to finish." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "Trigger a panic in the thread, notice how this doesn't affect `main`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/threads.md msgid "" "Use the `Result` return value from `handle.join()` to get access to the " "panic payload. This is a good time to talk about [`Any`](https://doc.rust-" "lang.org/std/any/index.html)." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "Normal threads cannot borrow from their environment:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "" "However, you can use a [scoped thread](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/thread/" "fn.scope.html) for this:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "" "The reason for that is that when the `thread::scope` function completes, all " "the threads are guaranteed to be joined, so they can return borrowed data." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/scoped-threads.md msgid "" "Normal Rust borrowing rules apply: you can either borrow mutably by one " "thread, or immutably by any number of threads." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels.md msgid "" "Rust channels have two parts: a `Sender` and a `Receiver`. The two " "parts are connected via the channel, but you only see the end-points." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels.md msgid "\"Received: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels.md msgid "" "`mpsc` stands for Multi-Producer, Single-Consumer. `Sender` and `SyncSender` " "implement `Clone` (so you can make multiple producers) but `Receiver` does " "not." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels.md msgid "" "`send()` and `recv()` return `Result`. If they return `Err`, it means the " "counterpart `Sender` or `Receiver` is dropped and the channel is closed." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md msgid "You get an unbounded and asynchronous channel with `mpsc::channel()`:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "\"Message {i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "\"{thread_id:?}: sent Message {i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "\"{thread_id:?}: done\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/unbounded.md src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "\"Main: got {msg}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "" "With bounded (synchronous) channels, `send` can block the current thread:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "" "Calling `send` will block the current thread until there is space in the " "channel for the new message. The thread can be blocked indefinitely if there " "is nobody who reads from the channel." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "" "A call to `send` will abort with an error (that is why it returns `Result`) " "if the channel is closed. A channel is closed when the receiver is dropped." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/channels/bounded.md msgid "" "A bounded channel with a size of zero is called a \"rendezvous channel\". " "Every send will block the current thread until another thread calls `read`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "" "How does Rust know to forbid shared access across threads? The answer is in " "two traits:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "" "[`Send`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/marker/trait.Send.html): a type `T` " "is `Send` if it is safe to move a `T` across a thread boundary." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "" "[`Sync`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/marker/trait.Sync.html): a type `T` " "is `Sync` if it is safe to move a `&T` across a thread boundary." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "" "`Send` and `Sync` are [unsafe traits](../unsafe/unsafe-traits.md). The " "compiler will automatically derive them for your types as long as they only " "contain `Send` and `Sync` types. You can also implement them manually when " "you know it is valid." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "" "One can think of these traits as markers that the type has certain thread-" "safety properties." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync.md msgid "They can be used in the generic constraints as normal traits." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/send.md msgid "" "A type `T` is [`Send`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/marker/trait.Send.html) " "if it is safe to move a `T` value to another thread." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/send.md msgid "" "The effect of moving ownership to another thread is that _destructors_ will " "run in that thread. So the question is when you can allocate a value in one " "thread and deallocate it in another." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/send.md msgid "" "As an example, a connection to the SQLite library must only be accessed from " "a single thread." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "" "A type `T` is [`Sync`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/marker/trait.Sync.html) " "if it is safe to access a `T` value from multiple threads at the same time." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "More precisely, the definition is:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "`T` is `Sync` if and only if `&T` is `Send`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "" "This statement is essentially a shorthand way of saying that if a type is " "thread-safe for shared use, it is also thread-safe to pass references of it " "across threads." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/sync.md msgid "" "This is because if a type is Sync it means that it can be shared across " "multiple threads without the risk of data races or other synchronization " "issues, so it is safe to move it to another thread. A reference to the type " "is also safe to move to another thread, because the data it references can " "be accessed from any thread safely." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`Send + Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "Most types you come across are `Send + Sync`:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`i8`, `f32`, `bool`, `char`, `&str`, ..." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`(T1, T2)`, `[T; N]`, `&[T]`, `struct { x: T }`, ..." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`String`, `Option`, `Vec`, `Box`, ..." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`Arc`: Explicitly thread-safe via atomic reference count." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`Mutex`: Explicitly thread-safe via internal locking." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`AtomicBool`, `AtomicU8`, ...: Uses special atomic instructions." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "The generic types are typically `Send + Sync` when the type parameters are " "`Send + Sync`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`Send + !Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "These types can be moved to other threads, but they're not thread-safe. " "Typically because of interior mutability:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`mpsc::Sender`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`mpsc::Receiver`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`Cell`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`RefCell`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`!Send + Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "These types are thread-safe, but they cannot be moved to another thread:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "`MutexGuard`: Uses OS level primitives which must be deallocated on " "the thread which created them." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "`!Send + !Sync`" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "These types are not thread-safe and cannot be moved to other threads:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "`Rc`: each `Rc` has a reference to an `RcBox`, which contains a non-" "atomic reference count." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/send-sync/examples.md msgid "" "`*const T`, `*mut T`: Rust assumes raw pointers may have special concurrency " "considerations." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state.md msgid "" "Rust uses the type system to enforce synchronization of shared data. This is " "primarily done via two types:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state.md msgid "" "[`Arc`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Arc.html), atomic " "reference counted `T`: handles sharing between threads and takes care to " "deallocate `T` when the last reference is dropped," msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state.md msgid "" "[`Mutex`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Mutex.html): ensures " "mutually exclusive access to the `T` value." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "" "[`Arc`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Arc.html) allows shared " "read-only access via `Arc::clone`:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "\"{thread_id:?}: {v:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "\"v: {v:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "" "`Arc` stands for \"Atomic Reference Counted\", a thread safe version of `Rc` " "that uses atomic operations." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "" "`Arc` implements `Clone` whether or not `T` does. It implements `Send` " "and `Sync` if and only if `T` implements them both." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "" "`Arc::clone()` has the cost of atomic operations that get executed, but " "after that the use of the `T` is free." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "" "Beware of reference cycles, `Arc` does not use a garbage collector to detect " "them." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/arc.md msgid "`std::sync::Weak` can help." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "[`Mutex`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Mutex.html) ensures " "mutual exclusion _and_ allows mutable access to `T` behind a read-only " "interface (another form of [interior mutability](../../borrowing/interior-" "mutability)):" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "\"v: {:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "Notice how we have a [`impl Sync for Mutex`](https://doc.rust-" "lang.org/std/sync/struct.Mutex.html#impl-Sync-for-Mutex%3CT%3E) blanket " "implementation." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "`Mutex` in Rust looks like a collection with just one element --- the " "protected data." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "It is not possible to forget to acquire the mutex before accessing the " "protected data." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "You can get an `&mut T` from an `&Mutex` by taking the lock. The " "`MutexGuard` ensures that the `&mut T` doesn't outlive the lock being held." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "`Mutex` implements both `Send` and `Sync` iff (if and only if) `T` " "implements `Send`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "A read-write lock counterpart: `RwLock`." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "Why does `lock()` return a `Result`?" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/mutex.md msgid "" "If the thread that held the `Mutex` panicked, the `Mutex` becomes " "\"poisoned\" to signal that the data it protected might be in an " "inconsistent state. Calling `lock()` on a poisoned mutex fails with a " "[`PoisonError`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.PoisonError.html). " "You can call `into_inner()` on the error to recover the data regardless." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "Let us see `Arc` and `Mutex` in action:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "// use std::sync::{Arc, Mutex};\n" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "Possible solution:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "Notable parts:" msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "" "`v` is wrapped in both `Arc` and `Mutex`, because their concerns are " "orthogonal." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "" "Wrapping a `Mutex` in an `Arc` is a common pattern to share mutable state " "between threads." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "" "`v: Arc<_>` needs to be cloned as `v2` before it can be moved into another " "thread. Note `move` was added to the lambda signature." msgstr "" #: src/concurrency/shared_state/example.md msgid "" "Blocks are introduced to narrow the scope of the `LockGuard` as much as " "possible." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/morning.md msgid "Let us practice our new concurrency skills with" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/morning.md msgid "Dining philosophers: a classic problem in concurrency." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/morning.md msgid "" "Multi-threaded link checker: a larger project where you'll use Cargo to " "download dependencies and then check links in parallel." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "The dining philosophers problem is a classic problem in concurrency:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "" "Five philosophers dine together at the same table. Each philosopher has " "their own place at the table. There is a fork between each plate. The dish " "served is a kind of spaghetti which has to be eaten with two forks. Each " "philosopher can only alternately think and eat. Moreover, a philosopher can " "only eat their spaghetti when they have both a left and right fork. Thus two " "forks will only be available when their two nearest neighbors are thinking, " "not eating. After an individual philosopher finishes eating, they will put " "down both forks." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "" "You will need a local [Cargo installation](../../cargo/running-locally.md) " "for this exercise. Copy the code below to a file called `src/main.rs`, fill " "out the blanks, and test that `cargo run` does not deadlock:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "// left_fork: ...\n" " // right_fork: ...\n" " // thoughts: ...\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Eureka! {} has a new idea!\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Pick up forks...\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"{} is eating...\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Socrates\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Hypatia\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Plato\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Aristotle\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Pythagoras\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Create forks\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Create philosophers\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "// Make each of them think and eat 100 times\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Output their thoughts\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "You can use the following `Cargo.toml`:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[package]\n" "name = \"dining-philosophers\"\n" "version = \"0.1.0\"\n" "edition = \"2021\"\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "Let us use our new knowledge to create a multi-threaded link checker. It " "should start at a webpage and check that links on the page are valid. It " "should recursively check other pages on the same domain and keep doing this " "until all pages have been validated." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "For this, you will need an HTTP client such as [`reqwest`](https://docs.rs/" "reqwest/). Create a new Cargo project and `reqwest` it as a dependency with:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "If `cargo add` fails with `error: no such subcommand`, then please edit the " "`Cargo.toml` file by hand. Add the dependencies listed below." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "You will also need a way to find links. We can use [`scraper`](https://docs." "rs/scraper/) for that:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "Finally, we'll need some way of handling errors. We use [`thiserror`]" "(https://docs.rs/thiserror/) for that:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "The `cargo add` calls will update the `Cargo.toml` file to look like this:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[package]\n" "name = \"link-checker\"\n" "version = \"0.1.0\"\n" "edition = \"2021\"\n" "publish = false\n" "\n" "[dependencies]\n" "reqwest = { version = \"0.11.12\", features = [\"blocking\", \"rustls-" "tls\"] }\n" "scraper = \"0.13.0\"\n" "thiserror = \"1.0.37\"\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "You can now download the start page. Try with a small site such as `https://" "www.google.org/`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "Your `src/main.rs` file should look something like this:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"request error: {0}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"bad http response: {0}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"Checking {:#}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"href\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"On {base_url:#}: ignored unparsable {href:?}: {err}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"https://www.google.org\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "\"Links: {links:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "\"Could not extract links: {err:#}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "Run the code in `src/main.rs` with" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "Use threads to check the links in parallel: send the URLs to be checked to a " "channel and let a few threads check the URLs in parallel." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/link-checker.md msgid "" "Extend this to recursively extract links from all pages on the `www.google." "org` domain. Put an upper limit of 100 pages or so so that you don't end up " "being blocked by the site." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "Concurrency Morning Exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "([back to exercise](dining-philosophers.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"{} is trying to eat\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "" "// To avoid a deadlock, we have to break the symmetry\n" " // somewhere. This will swap the forks without deinitializing\n" " // either of them.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"{thought}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "Link Checker" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "([back to exercise](link-checker.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "" "/// Determine whether links within the given page should be extracted.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "" "/// Mark the given page as visited, returning false if it had already\n" " /// been visited.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "// The sender got dropped. No more commands coming in.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"Got crawling error: {:#}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-morning.md msgid "\"Bad URLs: {:#?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "Async Rust" msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "" "\"Async\" is a concurrency model where multiple tasks are executed " "concurrently by executing each task until it would block, then switching to " "another task that is ready to make progress. The model allows running a " "larger number of tasks on a limited number of threads. This is because the " "per-task overhead is typically very low and operating systems provide " "primitives for efficiently identifying I/O that is able to proceed." msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "" "Rust's asynchronous operation is based on \"futures\", which represent work " "that may be completed in the future. Futures are \"polled\" until they " "signal that they are complete." msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "" "Futures are polled by an async runtime, and several different runtimes are " "available." msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "" "Python has a similar model in its `asyncio`. However, its `Future` type is " "callback-based, and not polled. Async Python programs require a \"loop\", " "similar to a runtime in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/async.md msgid "" "JavaScript's `Promise` is similar, but again callback-based. The language " "runtime implements the event loop, so many of the details of Promise " "resolution are hidden." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "At a high level, async Rust code looks very much like \"normal\" sequential " "code:" msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "\"Count is: {i}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "Note that this is a simplified example to show the syntax. There is no long " "running operation or any real concurrency in it!" msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "What is the return type of an async call?" msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "Use `let future: () = async_main(10);` in `main` to see the type." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "The \"async\" keyword is syntactic sugar. The compiler replaces the return " "type with a future." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "You cannot make `main` async, without additional instructions to the " "compiler on how to use the returned future." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "You need an executor to run async code. `block_on` blocks the current thread " "until the provided future has run to completion." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "`.await` asynchronously waits for the completion of another operation. " "Unlike `block_on`, `.await` doesn't block the current thread." msgstr "" #: src/async/async-await.md msgid "" "`.await` can only be used inside an `async` function (or block; these are " "introduced later)." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "[`Future`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/future/trait.Future.html) is a " "trait, implemented by objects that represent an operation that may not be " "complete yet. A future can be polled, and `poll` returns a [`Poll`](https://" "doc.rust-lang.org/std/task/enum.Poll.html)." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "An async function returns an `impl Future`. It's also possible (but " "uncommon) to implement `Future` for your own types. For example, the " "`JoinHandle` returned from `tokio::spawn` implements `Future` to allow " "joining to it." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "The `.await` keyword, applied to a Future, causes the current async function " "to pause until that Future is ready, and then evaluates to its output." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "The `Future` and `Poll` types are implemented exactly as shown; click the " "links to show the implementations in the docs." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "We will not get to `Pin` and `Context`, as we will focus on writing async " "code, rather than building new async primitives. Briefly:" msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "`Context` allows a Future to schedule itself to be polled again when an " "event occurs." msgstr "" #: src/async/futures.md msgid "" "`Pin` ensures that the Future isn't moved in memory, so that pointers into " "that future remain valid. This is required to allow references to remain " "valid after an `.await`." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "A _runtime_ provides support for performing operations asynchronously (a " "_reactor_) and is responsible for executing futures (an _executor_). Rust " "does not have a \"built-in\" runtime, but several options are available:" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "[Tokio](https://tokio.rs/): performant, with a well-developed ecosystem of " "functionality like [Hyper](https://hyper.rs/) for HTTP or [Tonic](https://" "github.com/hyperium/tonic) for gRPC." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "[async-std](https://async.rs/): aims to be a \"std for async\", and includes " "a basic runtime in `async::task`." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "[smol](https://docs.rs/smol/latest/smol/): simple and lightweight" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "Several larger applications have their own runtimes. For example, [Fuchsia]" "(https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/fuchsia/+/refs/heads/main/src/lib/fuchsia-" "async/src/lib.rs) already has one." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "Note that of the listed runtimes, only Tokio is supported in the Rust " "playground. The playground also does not permit any I/O, so most interesting " "async things can't run in the playground." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes.md msgid "" "Futures are \"inert\" in that they do not do anything (not even start an I/O " "operation) unless there is an executor polling them. This differs from JS " "Promises, for example, which will run to completion even if they are never " "used." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "Tokio provides:" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "A multi-threaded runtime for executing asynchronous code." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "An asynchronous version of the standard library." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "A large ecosystem of libraries." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "\"Count in task: {i}!\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "\"Main task: {i}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "With the `tokio::main` macro we can now make `main` async." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "The `spawn` function creates a new, concurrent \"task\"." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "Note: `spawn` takes a `Future`, you don't call `.await` on `count_to`." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "**Further exploration:**" msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "" "Why does `count_to` not (usually) get to 10? This is an example of async " "cancellation. `tokio::spawn` returns a handle which can be awaited to wait " "until it finishes." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "Try `count_to(10).await` instead of spawning." msgstr "" #: src/async/runtimes/tokio.md msgid "Try awaiting the task returned from `tokio::spawn`." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "Rust has a task system, which is a form of lightweight threading." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "" "A task has a single top-level future which the executor polls to make " "progress. That future may have one or more nested futures that its `poll` " "method polls, corresponding loosely to a call stack. Concurrency within a " "task is possible by polling multiple child futures, such as racing a timer " "and an I/O operation." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "\"127.0.0.1:0\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "\"listening on port {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "\"connection from {addr:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "b\"Who are you?\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "\"socket error\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "\"Thanks for dialing in, {name}!\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "" "Copy this example into your prepared `src/main.rs` and run it from there." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "" "Try connecting to it with a TCP connection tool like [nc](https://www.unix." "com/man-page/linux/1/nc/) or [telnet](https://www.unix.com/man-page/linux/1/" "telnet/)." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "" "Ask students to visualize what the state of the example server would be with " "a few connected clients. What tasks exist? What are their Futures?" msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "" "This is the first time we've seen an `async` block. This is similar to a " "closure, but does not take any arguments. Its return value is a Future, " "similar to an `async fn`." msgstr "" #: src/async/tasks.md msgid "" "Refactor the async block into a function, and improve the error handling " "using `?`." msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "" "Several crates have support for asynchronous channels. For instance `tokio`:" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "\"Received {count} pings so far.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "\"ping_handler complete\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "\"Failed to send ping.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "\"Sent {} pings so far.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "\"Something went wrong in ping handler task.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "Change the channel size to `3` and see how it affects the execution." msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "" "Overall, the interface is similar to the `sync` channels as seen in the " "[morning class](concurrency/channels.md)." msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "Try removing the `std::mem::drop` call. What happens? Why?" msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "" "The [Flume](https://docs.rs/flume/latest/flume/) crate has channels that " "implement both `sync` and `async` `send` and `recv`. This can be convenient " "for complex applications with both IO and heavy CPU processing tasks." msgstr "" #: src/async/channels.md msgid "" "What makes working with `async` channels preferable is the ability to " "combine them with other `future`s to combine them and create complex control " "flow." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow.md msgid "Futures Control Flow" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow.md msgid "" "Futures can be combined together to produce concurrent compute flow graphs. " "We have already seen tasks, that function as independent threads of " "execution." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow.md msgid "[Join](control-flow/join.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow.md msgid "[Select](control-flow/select.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "" "A join operation waits until all of a set of futures are ready, and returns " "a collection of their results. This is similar to `Promise.all` in " "JavaScript or `asyncio.gather` in Python." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "\"https://google.com\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "\"https://httpbin.org/ip\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "\"https://play.rust-lang.org/\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "\"BAD_URL\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "" "For multiple futures of disjoint types, you can use `std::future::join!` but " "you must know how many futures you will have at compile time. This is " "currently in the `futures` crate, soon to be stabilised in `std::future`." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "" "The risk of `join` is that one of the futures may never resolve, this would " "cause your program to stall." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/join.md msgid "" "You can also combine `join_all` with `join!` for instance to join all " "requests to an http service as well as a database query. Try adding a " "`tokio::time::sleep` to the future, using `futures::join!`. This is not a " "timeout (that requires `select!`, explained in the next chapter), but " "demonstrates `join!`." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "A select operation waits until any of a set of futures is ready, and " "responds to that future's result. In JavaScript, this is similar to `Promise." "race`. In Python, it compares to `asyncio.wait(task_set, return_when=asyncio." "FIRST_COMPLETED)`." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "Similar to a match statement, the body of `select!` has a number of arms, " "each of the form `pattern = future => statement`. When a `future` is ready, " "its return value is destructured by the `pattern`. The `statement` is then " "run with the resulting variables. The `statement` result becomes the result " "of the `select!` macro." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Felix\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Failed to send cat.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Rex\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Failed to send dog.\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Failed to receive winner\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "\"Winner is {winner:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "In this example, we have a race between a cat and a dog. " "`first_animal_to_finish_race` listens to both channels and will pick " "whichever arrives first. Since the dog takes 50ms, it wins against the cat " "that take 500ms." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "You can use `oneshot` channels in this example as the channels are supposed " "to receive only one `send`." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "Try adding a deadline to the race, demonstrating selecting different sorts " "of futures." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "Note that `select!` drops unmatched branches, which cancels their futures. " "It is easiest to use when every execution of `select!` creates new futures." msgstr "" #: src/async/control-flow/select.md msgid "" "An alternative is to pass `&mut future` instead of the future itself, but " "this can lead to issues, further discussed in the pinning slide." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "Pitfalls of async/await" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "" "Async / await provides convenient and efficient abstraction for concurrent " "asynchronous programming. However, the async/await model in Rust also comes " "with its share of pitfalls and footguns. We illustrate some of them in this " "chapter:" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "[Blocking the Executor](pitfalls/blocking-executor.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "[Pin](pitfalls/pin.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "[Async Traits](pitfalls/async-traits.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls.md msgid "[Cancellation](pitfalls/cancellation.md)" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "Blocking the executor" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "Most async runtimes only allow IO tasks to run concurrently. This means that " "CPU blocking tasks will block the executor and prevent other tasks from " "being executed. An easy workaround is to use async equivalent methods where " "possible." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "\"future {id} slept for {duration_ms}ms, finished after {}ms\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "\"current_thread\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "Run the code and see that the sleeps happen consecutively rather than " "concurrently." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "The `\"current_thread\"` flavor puts all tasks on a single thread. This " "makes the effect more obvious, but the bug is still present in the multi-" "threaded flavor." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "Switch the `std::thread::sleep` to `tokio::time::sleep` and await its result." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "Another fix would be to `tokio::task::spawn_blocking` which spawns an actual " "thread and transforms its handle into a future without blocking the executor." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "You should not think of tasks as OS threads. They do not map 1 to 1 and most " "executors will allow many tasks to run on a single OS thread. This is " "particularly problematic when interacting with other libraries via FFI, " "where that library might depend on thread-local storage or map to specific " "OS threads (e.g., CUDA). Prefer `tokio::task::spawn_blocking` in such " "situations." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/blocking-executor.md msgid "" "Use sync mutexes with care. Holding a mutex over an `.await` may cause " "another task to block, and that task may be running on the same thread." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Async blocks and functions return types implementing the `Future` trait. The " "type returned is the result of a compiler transformation which turns local " "variables into data stored inside the future." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Some of those variables can hold pointers to other local variables. Because " "of that, the future should never be moved to a different memory location, as " "it would invalidate those pointers." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "To prevent moving the future type in memory, it can only be polled through a " "pinned pointer. `Pin` is a wrapper around a reference that disallows all " "operations that would move the instance it points to into a different memory " "location." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "// A work item. In this case, just sleep for the given time and respond\n" "// with a message on the `respond_on` channel.\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "// A worker which listens for work on a queue and performs it.\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "// Pretend to work.\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "\"failed to send response\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "// TODO: report number of iterations every 100ms\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "// A requester which requests work and waits for it to complete.\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "\"failed to send on work queue\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "\"failed waiting for response\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "\"work result for iteration {i}: {resp}\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "You may recognize this as an example of the actor pattern. Actors typically " "call `select!` in a loop." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "This serves as a summation of a few of the previous lessons, so take your " "time with it." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Naively add a `_ = sleep(Duration::from_millis(100)) => { println!(..) }` to " "the `select!`. This will never execute. Why?" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Instead, add a `timeout_fut` containing that future outside of the `loop`:" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "This still doesn't work. Follow the compiler errors, adding `&mut` to the " "`timeout_fut` in the `select!` to work around the move, then using `Box::" "pin`:" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "This compiles, but once the timeout expires it is `Poll::Ready` on every " "iteration (a fused future would help with this). Update to reset " "`timeout_fut` every time it expires." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Box allocates on the heap. In some cases, `std::pin::pin!` (only recently " "stabilized, with older code often using `tokio::pin!`) is also an option, " "but that is difficult to use for a future that is reassigned." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Another alternative is to not use `pin` at all but spawn another task that " "will send to a `oneshot` channel every 100ms." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "Data that contains pointers to itself is called self-referential. Normally, " "the Rust borrow checker would prevent self-referential data from being " "moved, as the references cannot outlive the data they point to. However, the " "code transformation for async blocks and functions is not verified by the " "borrow checker." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "`Pin` is a wrapper around a reference. An object cannot be moved from its " "place using a pinned pointer. However, it can still be moved through an " "unpinned pointer." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/pin.md msgid "" "The `poll` method of the `Future` trait uses `Pin<&mut Self>` instead of " "`&mut Self` to refer to the instance. That's why it can only be called on a " "pinned pointer." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "" "Async methods in traits are not yet supported in the stable channel ([An " "experimental feature exists in nightly and should be stabilized in the mid " "term.](https://blog.rust-lang.org/inside-rust/2022/11/17/async-fn-in-trait-" "nightly.html))" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "" "The crate [async_trait](https://docs.rs/async-trait/latest/async_trait/) " "provides a workaround through a macro:" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "\"running all sleepers..\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "\"slept for {}ms\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "" "`async_trait` is easy to use, but note that it's using heap allocations to " "achieve this. This heap allocation has performance overhead." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "" "The challenges in language support for `async trait` are deep Rust and " "probably not worth describing in-depth. Niko Matsakis did a good job of " "explaining them in [this post](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/" "blog/2019/10/26/async-fn-in-traits-are-hard/) if you are interested in " "digging deeper." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/async-traits.md msgid "" "Try creating a new sleeper struct that will sleep for a random amount of " "time and adding it to the Vec." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "Dropping a future implies it can never be polled again. This is called " "_cancellation_ and it can occur at any `await` point. Care is needed to " "ensure the system works correctly even when futures are cancelled. For " "example, it shouldn't deadlock or lose data." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "\"not UTF-8\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "\"hi\\nthere\\n\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "\"tick!\"" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "The compiler doesn't help with cancellation-safety. You need to read API " "documentation and consider what state your `async fn` holds." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "Unlike `panic` and `?`, cancellation is part of normal control flow (vs " "error-handling)." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "The example loses parts of the string." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "Whenever the `tick()` branch finishes first, `next()` and its `buf` are " "dropped." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "`LinesReader` can be made cancellation-safe by making `buf` part of the " "struct:" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "// prefix buf and bytes with self.\n" msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "[`Interval::tick`](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/time/struct.Interval." "html#method.tick) is cancellation-safe because it keeps track of whether a " "tick has been 'delivered'." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "[`AsyncReadExt::read`](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/io/trait." "AsyncReadExt.html#method.read) is cancellation-safe because it either " "returns or doesn't read data." msgstr "" #: src/async/pitfalls/cancellation.md msgid "" "[`AsyncBufReadExt::read_line`](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/io/trait." "AsyncBufReadExt.html#method.read_line) is similar to the example and _isn't_ " "cancellation-safe. See its documentation for details and alternatives." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/afternoon.md msgid "" "To practice your Async Rust skills, we have again two exercises for you:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/afternoon.md msgid "" "Dining philosophers: we already saw this problem in the morning. This time " "you are going to implement it with Async Rust." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/afternoon.md msgid "" "A Broadcast Chat Application: this is a larger project that allows you " "experiment with more advanced Async Rust features." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "Dining Philosophers --- Async" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "See [dining philosophers](dining-philosophers.md) for a description of the " "problem." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "As before, you will need a local [Cargo installation](../../cargo/running-" "locally.md) for this exercise. Copy the code below to a file called `src/" "main.rs`, fill out the blanks, and test that `cargo run` does not deadlock:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Make them think and eat\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "Since this time you are using Async Rust, you'll need a `tokio` dependency. " "You can use the following `Cargo.toml`:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[package]\n" "name = \"dining-philosophers-async-dine\"\n" "version = \"0.1.0\"\n" "edition = \"2021\"\n" "\n" "[dependencies]\n" "tokio = { version = \"1.26.0\", features = [\"sync\", \"time\", \"macros\", " "\"rt-multi-thread\"] }\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "" "Also note that this time you have to use the `Mutex` and the `mpsc` module " "from the `tokio` crate." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/dining-philosophers-async.md msgid "Can you make your implementation single-threaded?" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "In this exercise, we want to use our new knowledge to implement a broadcast " "chat application. We have a chat server that the clients connect to and " "publish their messages. The client reads user messages from the standard " "input, and sends them to the server. The chat server broadcasts each message " "that it receives to all the clients." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "For this, we use [a broadcast channel](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/" "sync/broadcast/fn.channel.html) on the server, and [`tokio_websockets`]" "(https://docs.rs/tokio-websockets/) for the communication between the client " "and the server." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Create a new Cargo project and add the following dependencies:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "_Cargo.toml_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "```toml\n" "[package]\n" "name = \"chat-async\"\n" "version = \"0.1.0\"\n" "edition = \"2021\"\n" "\n" "[dependencies]\n" "futures-util = { version = \"0.3.30\", features = [\"sink\"] }\n" "http = \"1.0.0\"\n" "tokio = { version = \"1.28.1\", features = [\"full\"] }\n" "tokio-websockets = { version = \"0.5.1\", features = [\"client\", " "\"fastrand\", \"server\", \"sha1_smol\"] }\n" "```" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "The required APIs" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "You are going to need the following functions from `tokio` and " "[`tokio_websockets`](https://docs.rs/tokio-websockets/). Spend a few minutes " "to familiarize yourself with the API." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "[StreamExt::next()](https://docs.rs/futures-util/0.3.28/futures_util/stream/" "trait.StreamExt.html#method.next) implemented by `WebSocketStream`: for " "asynchronously reading messages from a Websocket Stream." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "[SinkExt::send()](https://docs.rs/futures-util/0.3.28/futures_util/sink/" "trait.SinkExt.html#method.send) implemented by `WebSocketStream`: for " "asynchronously sending messages on a Websocket Stream." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "[Lines::next_line()](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/io/struct.Lines." "html#method.next_line): for asynchronously reading user messages from the " "standard input." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "[Sender::subscribe()](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/sync/broadcast/" "struct.Sender.html#method.subscribe): for subscribing to a broadcast channel." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Two binaries" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "Normally in a Cargo project, you can have only one binary, and one `src/main." "rs` file. In this project, we need two binaries. One for the client, and one " "for the server. You could potentially make them two separate Cargo projects, " "but we are going to put them in a single Cargo project with two binaries. " "For this to work, the client and the server code should go under `src/bin` " "(see the [documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/cargo-" "targets.html#binaries))." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "Copy the following server and client code into `src/bin/server.rs` and `src/" "bin/client.rs`, respectively. Your task is to complete these files as " "described below." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "_src/bin/server.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "// TODO: For a hint, see the description of the task below.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"127.0.0.1:2000\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"listening on port 2000\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"New connection from {addr:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Wrap the raw TCP stream into a websocket.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "_src/bin/client.rs_:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"ws://127.0.0.1:2000\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Running the binaries" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Run the server with:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "and the client with:" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Implement the `handle_connection` function in `src/bin/server.rs`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "Hint: Use `tokio::select!` for concurrently performing two tasks in a " "continuous loop. One task receives messages from the client and broadcasts " "them. The other sends messages received by the server to the client." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "Complete the main function in `src/bin/client.rs`." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "Hint: As before, use `tokio::select!` in a continuous loop for concurrently " "performing two tasks: (1) reading user messages from standard input and " "sending them to the server, and (2) receiving messages from the server, and " "displaying them for the user." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/chat-app.md msgid "" "Optional: Once you are done, change the code to broadcast messages to all " "clients, but the sender of the message." msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "Concurrency Afternoon Exercise" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "([back to exercise](dining-philosophers-async.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// Add a delay before picking the second fork to allow the execution\n" " // to transfer to another task\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// The locks are dropped here\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// To avoid a deadlock, we have to break the symmetry\n" " // somewhere. This will swap the forks without deinitializing\n" " // either of them.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// tx is dropped here, so we don't need to explicitly drop it later\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Here is a thought: {thought}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "([back to exercise](chat-app.md))" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"Welcome to chat! Type a message\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "" "// A continuous loop for concurrently performing two tasks: (1) receiving\n" " // messages from `ws_stream` and broadcasting them, and (2) receiving\n" " // messages on `bcast_rx` and sending them to the client.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"From client {addr:?} {text:?}\"" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "// Continuous loop for concurrently sending and receiving messages.\n" msgstr "" #: src/exercises/concurrency/solutions-afternoon.md msgid "\"From server: {}\"" msgstr "" #: src/thanks.md msgid "" "_Thank you for taking Comprehensive Rust 🦀!_ We hope you enjoyed it and " "that it was useful." msgstr "" #: src/thanks.md msgid "" "We've had a lot of fun putting the course together. The course is not " "perfect, so if you spotted any mistakes or have ideas for improvements, " "please get in [contact with us on GitHub](https://github.com/google/" "comprehensive-rust/discussions). We would love to hear from you." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "The following is a glossary which aims to give a short definition of many " "Rust terms. For translations, this also serves to connect the term back to " "the English original." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "allocate: \n" "Dynamic memory allocation on [the heap](memory-management/stack-vs-heap.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "argument: \n" "Information that is passed into a function or method." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Bare-metal Rust: \n" "Low-level Rust development, often deployed to a system without an operating " "system. See [Bare-metal Rust](bare-metal.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "block: \n" "See [Blocks](control-flow/blocks.md) and _scope_." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "borrow: \n" "See [Borrowing](ownership/borrowing.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "borrow checker: \n" "The part of the Rust compiler which checks that all borrows are valid." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "brace: \n" "`{` and `}`. Also called _curly brace_, they delimit _blocks_." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "build: \n" "The process of converting source code into executable code or a usable " "program." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "call: \n" "To invoke or execute a function or method." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "channel: \n" "Used to safely pass messages [between threads](concurrency/channels.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Comprehensive Rust 🦀: \n" "The courses here are jointly called Comprehensive Rust 🦀." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "concurrency: \n" "The execution of multiple tasks or processes at the same time." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Concurrency in Rust: \n" "See [Concurrency in Rust](concurrency.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "constant: \n" "A value that does not change during the execution of a program." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "control flow: \n" "The order in which the individual statements or instructions are executed in " "a program." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "crash: \n" "An unexpected and unhandled failure or termination of a program." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "enumeration: \n" "A data type that holds one of several named constants, possibly with an " "associated tuple or struct." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "error: \n" "An unexpected condition or result that deviates from the expected behavior." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "error handling: \n" "The process of managing and responding to errors that occur during program " "execution." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "exercise: \n" "A task or problem designed to practice and test programming skills." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "function: \n" "A reusable block of code that performs a specific task." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "garbage collector: \n" "A mechanism that automatically frees up memory occupied by objects that are " "no longer in use." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "generics: \n" "A feature that allows writing code with placeholders for types, enabling " "code reuse with different data types." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "immutable: \n" "Unable to be changed after creation." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "integration test: \n" "A type of test that verifies the interactions between different parts or " "components of a system." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "keyword: \n" "A reserved word in a programming language that has a specific meaning and " "cannot be used as an identifier." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "library: \n" "A collection of precompiled routines or code that can be used by programs." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "macro: \n" "Rust macros can be recognized by a `!` in the name. Macros are used when " "normal functions are not enough. A typical example is `format!`, which takes " "a variable number of arguments, which isn't supported by Rust functions." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "`main` function: \n" "Rust programs start executing with the `main` function." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "match: \n" "A control flow construct in Rust that allows for pattern matching on the " "value of an expression." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "memory leak: \n" "A situation where a program fails to release memory that is no longer " "needed, leading to a gradual increase in memory usage." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "method: \n" "A function associated with an object or a type in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "module: \n" "A namespace that contains definitions, such as functions, types, or traits, " "to organize code in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "move: \n" "The transfer of ownership of a value from one variable to another in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "mutable: \n" "A property in Rust that allows variables to be modified after they have been " "declared." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "ownership: \n" "The concept in Rust that defines which part of the code is responsible for " "managing the memory associated with a value." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "panic: \n" "An unrecoverable error condition in Rust that results in the termination of " "the program." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "parameter: \n" "A value that is passed into a function or method when it is called." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "pattern: \n" "A combination of values, literals, or structures that can be matched against " "an expression in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "payload: \n" "The data or information carried by a message, event, or data structure." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "program: \n" "A set of instructions that a computer can execute to perform a specific task " "or solve a particular problem." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "programming language: \n" "A formal system used to communicate instructions to a computer, such as Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "receiver: \n" "The first parameter in a Rust method that represents the instance on which " "the method is called." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "reference counting: \n" "A memory management technique in which the number of references to an object " "is tracked, and the object is deallocated when the count reaches zero." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "return: \n" "A keyword in Rust used to indicate the value to be returned from a function." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Rust: \n" "A systems programming language that focuses on safety, performance, and " "concurrency." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Rust Fundamentals: \n" "Days 1 to 3 of this course." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Rust in Android: \n" "See [Rust in Android](android.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "Rust in Chromium: \n" "See [Rust in Chromium](chromium.md)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "safe: \n" "Refers to code that adheres to Rust's ownership and borrowing rules, " "preventing memory-related errors." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "scope: \n" "The region of a program where a variable is valid and can be used." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "standard library: \n" "A collection of modules providing essential functionality in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "static: \n" "A keyword in Rust used to define static variables or items with a `'static` " "lifetime." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "string: \n" "A data type storing textual data. See [`String` vs `str`](basic-syntax/" "string-slices.html) for more." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "struct: \n" "A composite data type in Rust that groups together variables of different " "types under a single name." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "test: \n" "A Rust module containing functions that test the correctness of other " "functions." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "thread: \n" "A separate sequence of execution in a program, allowing concurrent execution." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "thread safety: \n" "The property of a program that ensures correct behavior in a multithreaded " "environment." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "trait: \n" "A collection of methods defined for an unknown type, providing a way to " "achieve polymorphism in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "trait bound: \n" "An abstraction where you can require types to implement some traits of your " "interest." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "tuple: \n" "A composite data type that contains variables of different types. Tuple " "fields have no names, and are accessed by their ordinal numbers." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "type: \n" "A classification that specifies which operations can be performed on values " "of a particular kind in Rust." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "type inference: \n" "The ability of the Rust compiler to deduce the type of a variable or " "expression." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "undefined behavior: \n" "Actions or conditions in Rust that have no specified result, often leading " "to unpredictable program behavior." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "union: \n" "A data type that can hold values of different types but only one at a time." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "unit test: \n" "Rust comes with built-in support for running small unit tests and larger " "integration tests. See [Unit Tests](testing/unit-tests.html)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "unit type: \n" "Type that holds no data, written as a tuple with no members." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "unsafe: \n" "The subset of Rust which allows you to trigger _undefined behavior_. See " "[Unsafe Rust](unsafe.html)." msgstr "" #: src/glossary.md msgid "" "variable: \n" "A memory location storing data. Variables are valid in a _scope_." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "Other Rust Resources" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "The Rust community has created a wealth of high-quality and free resources " "online." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "Official Documentation" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "The Rust project hosts many resources. These cover Rust in general:" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[The Rust Programming Language](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/): the " "canonical free book about Rust. Covers the language in detail and includes a " "few projects for people to build." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Rust By Example](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/): covers the " "Rust syntax via a series of examples which showcase different constructs. " "Sometimes includes small exercises where you are asked to expand on the code " "in the examples." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Rust Standard Library](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/): full documentation " "of the standard library for Rust." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[The Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/): an incomplete " "book which describes the Rust grammar and memory model." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "More specialized guides hosted on the official Rust site:" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[The Rustonomicon](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/): covers unsafe Rust, " "including working with raw pointers and interfacing with other languages " "(FFI)." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Asynchronous Programming in Rust](https://rust-lang.github.io/async-book/): " "covers the new asynchronous programming model which was introduced after the " "Rust Book was written." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[The Embedded Rust Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/embedded-book/): " "an introduction to using Rust on embedded devices without an operating " "system." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "Unofficial Learning Material" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "A small selection of other guides and tutorial for Rust:" msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Learn Rust the Dangerous Way](http://cliffle.com/p/dangerust/): covers Rust " "from the perspective of low-level C programmers." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Rust for Embedded C Programmers](https://docs.opentitan.org/doc/ug/" "rust_for_c/): covers Rust from the perspective of developers who write " "firmware in C." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Rust for professionals](https://overexact.com/rust-for-professionals/): " "covers the syntax of Rust using side-by-side comparisons with other " "languages such as C, C++, Java, JavaScript, and Python." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Rust on Exercism](https://exercism.org/tracks/rust): 100+ exercises to help " "you learn Rust." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Ferrous Teaching Material](https://ferrous-systems.github.io/teaching-" "material/index.html): a series of small presentations covering both basic " "and advanced part of the Rust language. Other topics such as WebAssembly, " "and async/await are also covered." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Beginner's Series to Rust](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/shows/beginners-" "series-to-rust/) and [Take your first steps with Rust](https://docs." "microsoft.com/en-us/learn/paths/rust-first-steps/): two Rust guides aimed at " "new developers. The first is a set of 35 videos and the second is a set of " "11 modules which covers Rust syntax and basic constructs." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "[Learn Rust With Entirely Too Many Linked Lists](https://rust-unofficial." "github.io/too-many-lists/): in-depth exploration of Rust's memory management " "rules, through implementing a few different types of list structures." msgstr "" #: src/other-resources.md msgid "" "Please see the [Little Book of Rust Books](https://lborb.github.io/book/) " "for even more Rust books." msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "" "The material here builds on top of the many great sources of Rust " "documentation. See the page on [other resources](other-resources.md) for a " "full list of useful resources." msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "" "The material of Comprehensive Rust is licensed under the terms of the Apache " "2.0 license, please see [`LICENSE`](https://github.com/google/comprehensive-" "rust/blob/main/LICENSE) for details." msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "Rust by Example" msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "" "Some examples and exercises have been copied and adapted from [Rust by " "Example](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/). Please see the " "`third_party/rust-by-example/` directory for details, including the license " "terms." msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "Rust on Exercism" msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "" "Some exercises have been copied and adapted from [Rust on Exercism](https://" "exercism.org/tracks/rust). Please see the `third_party/rust-on-exercism/` " "directory for details, including the license terms." msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "CXX" msgstr "" #: src/credits.md msgid "" "The [Interoperability with C++](android/interoperability/cpp.md) section " "uses an image from [CXX](https://cxx.rs/). Please see the `third_party/cxx/` " "directory for details, including the license terms." msgstr "" #~ msgid "Why Rust?" #~ msgstr "Почему Rust?" #~ msgid "Compile Time Guarantees" #~ msgstr "Гарантии времени компиляции" #~ msgid "Runtime Guarantees" #~ msgstr "Гарантии времени выполнения" #~ msgid "Modern Features" #~ msgstr "Современные возможности" #~ msgid "Basic Syntax" #~ msgstr "Базовый синтаксис" #~ msgid "String vs str" #~ msgstr "String и str" #~ msgid "Overloading" #~ msgstr "Перегрузка" #~ msgid "Arrays and for Loops" #~ msgstr "Массивы и циклы for" #~ msgid "if expressions" #~ msgstr "Выражение if" #~ msgid "for expressions" #~ msgstr "Выражение for" #~ msgid "while expressions" #~ msgstr "Выражение while" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Novel Control Flow" #~ msgstr "Поток управления" #~ msgid "if let expressions" #~ msgstr "Выражение if let" #~ msgid "while let expressions" #~ msgstr "Выражение while let" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Storing Books" #~ msgstr "Строки" #~ msgid "The course is fast paced and covers a lot of ground:" #~ msgstr "Курс проходит в быстром темпе и охватывает много вопросов:" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Day 2: Memory management, ownership, compound data types, and the " #~ "standard library." #~ msgstr "" #~ "День 2: Составные типы данных, шаблоны (patterns), стандартная библиотека." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Day 3: Generics, traits, error handling, testing, and unsafe Rust." #~ msgstr "" #~ "День 3: Типажи (traits) и обобщения (generics), обработка ошибок, " #~ "тестирование, небезопасный Rust." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "We suggest using [VS Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/) to edit the " #~ "code (but any LSP compatible editor works with rust-analyzer[3](https://" #~ "rust-analyzer.github.io/))." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Это позволит \\[rust-analyzer\\]\\[1\\] переходить к определениям в " #~ "исходном коде. Мы предлагаем использовать [VS Code](https://code." #~ "visualstudio.com/) для редактирования кода (поддерживается любой " #~ "совместимый с LSP редактор)." #~ msgid "" #~ "Some folks also like to use the [JetBrains](https://www.jetbrains.com/" #~ "clion/) family of IDEs, which do their own analysis but have their own " #~ "tradeoffs. If you prefer them, you can install the [Rust Plugin](https://" #~ "www.jetbrains.com/rust/). Please take note that as of January 2023 " #~ "debugging only works on the CLion version of the JetBrains IDEA suite." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Некоторым также нравится использовать семейство IDE [JetBrains](https://" #~ "www.jetbrains.com/clion/), которые выполняют собственный анализ, но имеют " #~ "свои особенности. Если вы предпочитаете их, вы можете установить [Rust " #~ "Plugin](https://www.jetbrains.com/rust/). Обратите внимание, что по " #~ "состоянию на январь 2023 года отладка работает только в CLion." #~ msgid "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cargo new exercise\n" #~ " Created binary (application) `exercise` package\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cargo new exercise\n" #~ " Created binary (application) `exercise` package\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cd exercise\n" #~ "$ cargo run\n" #~ " Compiling exercise v0.1.0 (/home/mgeisler/tmp/exercise)\n" #~ " Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.75s\n" #~ " Running `target/debug/exercise`\n" #~ "Hello, world!\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cd exercise\n" #~ "$ cargo run\n" #~ " Compiling exercise v0.1.0 (/home/mgeisler/tmp/exercise)\n" #~ " Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.75s\n" #~ " Running `target/debug/exercise`\n" #~ "Hello, world!\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"Edit me!\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"Edit me!\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cargo run\n" #~ " Compiling exercise v0.1.0 (/home/mgeisler/tmp/exercise)\n" #~ " Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.24s\n" #~ " Running `target/debug/exercise`\n" #~ "Edit me!\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```shell\n" #~ "$ cargo run\n" #~ " Compiling exercise v0.1.0 (/home/mgeisler/tmp/exercise)\n" #~ " Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.24s\n" #~ " Running `target/debug/exercise`\n" #~ "Edit me!\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "The idea for the first day is to show _just enough_ of Rust to be able to " #~ "speak about the famous borrow checker. The way Rust handles memory is a " #~ "major feature and we should show students this right away." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Идея первого дня состоит в том, чтобы показать Rust _достаточно_, чтобы " #~ "иметь возможность говорить о знаменитом анализаторе заимствований. То, " #~ "как Rust работает с памятью --- важная особенность языка и мы должны " #~ "показать её студентам с самого начала." #~ msgid "" #~ "If you're teaching this in a classroom, this is a good place to go over " #~ "the schedule. We suggest splitting the day into two parts (following the " #~ "slides):" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Если вы преподаете в классе, то стоит проработать расписание. Мы " #~ "предлагаем разбить день на две части (по слайдам):" #~ msgid "Morning: 9:00 to 12:00," #~ msgstr "Утро: с 9:00 до 12:00," #~ msgid "Afternoon: 13:00 to 16:00." #~ msgstr "Вторая половина дня: с 13:00 до 16:00." #~ msgid "" #~ "You can of course adjust this as necessary. Please make sure to include " #~ "breaks, we recommend a break every hour!" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы, конечно, можете изменять расписание по мере необходимости. " #~ "Пожалуйста, не забудьте добавить перерывы. Мы рекомендуем делать перерыв " #~ "каждый час!" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"Hello 🌍!\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"Привет 🌍!\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "Here is a small example program in Rust:" #~ msgstr "Небольшой пример программы на Rust:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() { // Program entry point\n" #~ " let mut x: i32 = 6; // Mutable variable binding\n" #~ " print!(\"{x}\"); // Macro for printing, like printf\n" #~ " while x != 1 { // No parenthesis around expression\n" #~ " if x % 2 == 0 { // Math like in other languages\n" #~ " x = x / 2;\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " x = 3 * x + 1;\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " print!(\" -> {x}\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() { // Точка входа в программу\n" #~ " let mut x: i32 = 6; // Объявление изменяемой переменной\n" #~ " print!(\"{x}\"); // Макрос для печати, наподобие printf\n" #~ " while x != 1 { // Нет круглых скобок вокруг выражения\n" #~ " if x % 2 == 0 { // Математика, как и в других языках\n" #~ " x = x / 2;\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " x = 3 * x + 1;\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " print!(\" -> {x}\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "The code implements the Collatz conjecture: it is believed that the loop " #~ "will always end, but this is not yet proved. Edit the code and play with " #~ "different inputs." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Код реализует гипотезу Коллатца: считается, что цикл всегда будет " #~ "заканчиваться, но это еще не доказано. Отредактируйте код и " #~ "поэкспериментируйте с разными входными данными." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Explain that all variables are statically typed. Try removing `i32` to " #~ "trigger type inference. Try with `i8` instead and trigger a runtime " #~ "integer overflow." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Объясните, что все переменные статически типизированы. Попробуйте убрать " #~ "`i32` чтобы инициировать вывод типа. Попробуйте использовать `i8` и " #~ "получить целочисленное переполнение." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Change `let mut x` to `let x`, discuss the compiler error." #~ msgstr "Измените `let mut x` на `let x`, обсудите ошибку компилятора." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Show how `print!` gives a compilation error if the arguments don't match " #~ "the format string." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Покажите, как `print!` выдает ошибку компиляции, если аргументы не " #~ "соответствуют строке формата." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Show how you need to use `{}` as a placeholder if you want to print an " #~ "expression which is more complex than just a single variable." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Покажите, как нужно использовать `{}` в качестве заполнителя, если вы " #~ "хотите напечатать выражение, которое сложнее, чем просто одна переменная." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Show the students the standard library, show them how to search for `std::" #~ "fmt` which has the rules of the formatting mini-language. It's important " #~ "that the students become familiar with searching in the standard library." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Продемонстрируйте студентам стандартную библиотеку, покажите им, как " #~ "найти `std::fmt`, который содержит правила мини--языка форматирования. " #~ "Важно, чтобы учащиеся ознакомились с поиском по стандартной библиотеке." #~ msgid "Compile time memory safety." #~ msgstr "Безопасность памяти во время компиляции." #~ msgid "Lack of undefined runtime behavior." #~ msgstr "Отсутствие неопределенного поведения во время выполнения." #~ msgid "Modern language features." #~ msgstr "Современные возможности." #~ msgid "Static memory management at compile time:" #~ msgstr "Управление статической памятью во время компиляции:" #~ msgid "No memory leaks (_mostly_, see notes)." #~ msgstr "Нет утечек памяти (_в основном_, см. примечания)." #~ msgid "" #~ "It is possible to produce memory leaks in (safe) Rust. Some examples are:" #~ msgstr "В (безопасном) Rust возможны утечки памяти. Вот некоторые примеры:" #~ msgid "" #~ "You can use [`Box::leak`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/struct.Box." #~ "html#method.leak) to leak a pointer. A use of this could be to get " #~ "runtime-initialized and runtime-sized static variables" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы можете использовать [`Box::leak`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/boxed/" #~ "struct.Box.html#method.leak) для утечки указателя. Это может быть " #~ "использовано для получения инициализированных статических переменных, " #~ "размерность которых определяется во время выполнения." #~ msgid "" #~ "You can use [`std::mem::forget`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/mem/fn." #~ "forget.html) to make the compiler \"forget\" about a value (meaning the " #~ "destructor is never run)." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы можете использовать [`std::mem::forget`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" #~ "mem/fn.forget.html), чтобы заставить компилятор “забыть” о значении " #~ "(значит, что деструктор никогда не будет вызван)." #~ msgid "" #~ "You can also accidentally create a [reference cycle](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/book/ch15-06-reference-cycles.html) with `Rc` or `Arc`." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы также можете случайно создать ссылочный цикл ([reference cycle]" #~ "(https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch15-06-reference-cycles.html)) с помощью " #~ "`Rc` или `Arc`." #~ msgid "" #~ "In fact, some will consider infinitely populating a collection a memory " #~ "leak and Rust does not protect from those." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Некоторые могут счесть неограниченное заполнение коллекции утечкой " #~ "памяти, и Rust не защищает от этого." #~ msgid "" #~ "For the purpose of this course, \"No memory leaks\" should be understood " #~ "as \"Pretty much no _accidental_ memory leaks\"." #~ msgstr "" #~ "В рамках данного курса ”Отсутствие утечек памяти” следует понимать как " #~ "”Практически полное отсутствие _случайных_ утечек памяти”." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Integer overflow is defined via the [`overflow-checks`](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/rustc/codegen-options/index.html#overflow-checks) compile-time " #~ "flag. If enabled, the program will panic (a controlled crash of the " #~ "program), otherwise you get wrap-around semantics. By default, you get " #~ "panics in debug mode (`cargo build`) and wrap-around in release mode " #~ "(`cargo build --release`)." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Целочисленное переполнение определяется с помощью флага времени " #~ "компиляции. Варианты --- это либо паника (управляемый сбой программы), " #~ "либо переполнение (wrap-around). По умолчанию вы получаете панику в " #~ "режиме отладочной сборки (`cargo build`) и переполнение в режиме " #~ "финальной (`cargo build --release`)." #~ msgid "" #~ "Bounds checking cannot be disabled with a compiler flag. It can also not " #~ "be disabled directly with the `unsafe` keyword. However, `unsafe` allows " #~ "you to call functions such as `slice::get_unchecked` which does not do " #~ "bounds checking." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Проверка границ не может быть отключена с помощью флага компилятора. Ее " #~ "также нельзя отключить напрямую с помощью ключевого слова `unsafe`. " #~ "Однако `unsafe` позволяет вызывать функции, такие как `slice::" #~ "get_unchecked`, которые не проверяют границы." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Rust is built with all the experience gained in the last decades." #~ msgstr "Rust создан с учетом опыта, накопленного за последние 40 лет." #~ msgid "Language Features" #~ msgstr "Особенности языка" #~ msgid "Tooling" #~ msgstr "Набор инструментов" #~ msgid "" #~ "Zero-cost abstractions, similar to C++, means that you don't have to " #~ "'pay' for higher-level programming constructs with memory or CPU. For " #~ "example, writing a loop using `for` should result in roughly the same low " #~ "level instructions as using the `.iter().fold()` construct." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Абстракции с нулевой стоимостью, аналогичные C++, означают, что вам не " #~ "нужно ‘платить’ за высокоуровневые программные конструкции памятью или " #~ "процессорным временем. Например, написание цикла с использованием `for` " #~ "должно порождать примерно те же низкоуровневые инструкции, что и при " #~ "использовании конструкции `.iter().fold()`." #~ msgid "" #~ "It may be worth mentioning that Rust enums are 'Algebraic Data Types', " #~ "also known as 'sum types', which allow the type system to express things " #~ "like `Option` and `Result`." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Пожалуй, стоит упомянуть, что перечисления в Rust --- это ‘Алгебраические " #~ "типы данных’, также известные как ‘тип-сумма’, которые позволяют системе " #~ "типов выражать такие вещи, как `Option` и `Result`." #~ msgid "" #~ "Remind people to read the errors --- many developers have gotten used to " #~ "ignore lengthy compiler output. The Rust compiler is significantly more " #~ "talkative than other compilers. It will often provide you with " #~ "_actionable_ feedback, ready to copy-paste into your code." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Обратите внимание учащихся на важность чтения ошибок компилятора --- " #~ "многие разработчики привыкли игнорировать длинные выходные сигналы " #~ "компилятора. Компилятор Rust значительно более многословен, чем другие " #~ "компиляторы. Он часто предоставляет _полезную_ обратную связь, готовую к " #~ "копированию и вставке в ваш код." #~ msgid "" #~ "The Rust standard library is small compared to languages like Java, " #~ "Python, and Go. Rust does not come with several things you might consider " #~ "standard and essential:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Стандартная библиотека Rust невелика по сравнению с такими языками, как " #~ "Java, Python и Go. Rust не содержит некоторых компонентов, которые вы " #~ "могли бы счесть стандартными и неотъемлемыми:" #~ msgid "a random number generator, but see [rand](https://docs.rs/rand/)." #~ msgstr "генератор случайных чисел, но см. [rand](https://docs.rs/rand/)." #~ msgid "support for SSL or TLS, but see [rusttls](https://docs.rs/rustls/)." #~ msgstr "поддержка SSL или TLS, но см. [rusttls](https://docs.rs/rustls/)." #~ msgid "support for JSON, but see [serde_json](https://docs.rs/serde_json/)." #~ msgstr "поддержка JSON, но см. [serde_json](https://docs.rs/serde_json/)." #~ msgid "" #~ "The reasoning behind this is that functionality in the standard library " #~ "cannot go away, so it has to be very stable. For the examples above, the " #~ "Rust community is still working on finding the best solution --- and " #~ "perhaps there isn't a single \"best solution\" for some of these things." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Причина этого заключается в том, что функциональность из стандартной " #~ "библиотеки не может просто исчезнуть, поэтому она должна быть чрезвычайно " #~ "стабильной. В приведённых выше примерах сообщество Rust всё ещё работает " #~ "над поиском наилучшего решения --- и, возможно, для некоторых из этих " #~ "вещей не существует единого ”наилучшего решения”." #~ msgid "" #~ "Rust comes with a built-in package manager in the form of Cargo and this " #~ "makes it trivial to download and compile third-party crates. A " #~ "consequence of this is that the standard library can be smaller." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Rust поставляется со встроенным менеджером пакетов Cargo, что значительно " #~ "упрощает загрузку и компиляцию сторонних пакетов. Вследствие этого " #~ "стандартная библиотека может быть меньше." #~ msgid "" #~ "Discovering good third-party crates can be a problem. Sites like help with this by letting you compare health metrics for crates " #~ "to find a good and trusted one." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Поиск хороших покетов от сторонних разработчиков может стать проблемой. " #~ "Сайты, такие как помогают в этом, позволяя сравнивать " #~ "показатели состояния пакетов, чтобы отыскать подходящие и заслуживающие " #~ "доверия." #~ msgid "" #~ "[rust-analyzer](https://rust-analyzer.github.io/) is a well supported LSP " #~ "implementation used in major IDEs and text editors." #~ msgstr "" #~ "[rust-analyzer](https://rust-analyzer.github.io/) --- это хорошо " #~ "поддерживаемая реализация LSP, используемая во многих IDE и текстовых " #~ "редакторах." #~ msgid "`\"foo\"`, `\"two\\nlines\"`" #~ msgstr "`\"foo\"`, `\"two\\nlines\"`" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(r#\"link\"#);\n" #~ " println!(\"link\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(r#\"link\"#);\n" #~ " println!(\"link\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", b\"abc\");\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", &[97, 98, 99]);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", b\"abc\");\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", &[97, 98, 99]);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let t: (i8, bool) = (7, true);\n" #~ " println!(\"1st index: {}\", t.0);\n" #~ " println!(\"2nd index: {}\", t.1);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let t: (i8, bool) = (7, true);\n" #~ " println!(\"1-й индекс: {}\", t.0);\n" #~ " println!(\"2-й индекс: {}\", t.1);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "Like C++, Rust has references:" #~ msgstr "Как и в C++, в Rust есть ссылки:" #~ msgid "" #~ "We must dereference `ref_x` when assigning to it, similar to C and C++ " #~ "pointers." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Мы должны разыменовывать `ref_x` при присваивании значения, аналогично " #~ "указателям в C и C++." #~ msgid "" #~ "References that are declared as `mut` can be bound to different values " #~ "over their lifetime." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Ссылки, объявленные как `mut`, могут быть привязаны к разным значениям в " #~ "течение срока жизни." #~ msgid "A reference is said to \"borrow\" the value it refers to." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Говорят, что ссылка ”заимствует” значение, на которое она ссылается." #~ msgid "" #~ "Rust is tracking the lifetimes of all references to ensure they live long " #~ "enough." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Rust отслеживает время жизни всех ссылок, чтобы убедиться, что они живут " #~ "достаточно долго." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let mut a: [i32; 6] = [10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60];\n" #~ " println!(\"a: {a:?}\");\n" #~ "\n" #~ " let s: &[i32] = &a[2..4];\n" #~ "\n" #~ " println!(\"s: {s:?}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let array = [10, 20, 30];\n" #~ " println!(\"массив: {array:?}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "`String` vs `str`" #~ msgstr "String и str" #~ msgid "We can now understand the two string types in Rust:" #~ msgstr "Теперь давайте разберемся с двумя типами строк в Rust:" #~ msgid "" #~ "You can borrow `&str` slices from `String` via `&` and optionally range " #~ "selection." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы можете заимствовать `&str` срезы из `String` с помощью оператора `&` " #~ "и , при необходимости, указывать диапазон среза." #~ msgid "" #~ "A Rust version of the famous [FizzBuzz](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/" #~ "Fizz_buzz) interview question:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Rust--версия знаменитого вопроса для интервью [FizzBuzz](https://en." #~ "wikipedia.org/wiki/Fizz_buzz):" #~ msgid "" #~ "We refer in `main` to a function written below. Neither forward " #~ "declarations nor headers are necessary. " #~ msgstr "" #~ "В `main` мы ссылаемся на функцию, которая определена ниже. При этом ни " #~ "предварительные объявления, ни заголовки не требуются." #~ msgid "" #~ "The range expression in the `for` loop in `print_fizzbuzz_to()` contains " #~ "`=n`, which causes it to include the upper bound." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Выражение диапазона в цикле `for` в `fizzbuzz_to()` содержит `=n`, что " #~ "ведет к включению верхней границы диапазона." #~ msgid "" #~ "All language items in Rust can be documented using special `///` syntax." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Все языковые элементы в Rust могут быть задокументированы с " #~ "использованием особого синтаксиса `///`." #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "/// Determine whether the first argument is divisible by the second " #~ "argument.\n" #~ "///\n" #~ "/// If the second argument is zero, the result is false.\n" #~ "fn is_divisible_by(lhs: u32, rhs: u32) -> bool {\n" #~ " if rhs == 0 {\n" #~ " return false; // Corner case, early return\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " lhs % rhs == 0 // The last expression in a block is the return " #~ "value\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "/// Определяет, делится ли первый аргумент на второй.\n" #~ "///\n" #~ "/// Если второй аргумент равен нулю, то результат равен false.\n" #~ "fn is_divisible_by(lhs: u32, rhs: u32) -> bool {\n" #~ " if rhs == 0 {\n" #~ " return false; // Особый случай, досрочное возвращение\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " lhs % rhs == 0 // Последнее выражение в блоке - это возвращаемое " #~ "значение\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "This course does not include rustdoc on slides, just to save space, but " #~ "in real code they should be present." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Этот курс не включает rustdoc на слайдах, просто для экономии места, но в " #~ "реальном коде они должны присутствовать." #~ msgid "" #~ "Inner doc comments are discussed later (in the page on modules) and need " #~ "not be addressed here." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Inner doc комментарии будут рассмотрены позже (на странице о модулях)." #~ msgid "" #~ "Methods are functions associated with a type. The `self` argument of a " #~ "method is an instance of the type it is associated with:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Методы это функции, связанные с типом. Аргумент `self` в методе --- это " #~ "экземпляр типа, с которым он связан:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "struct Rectangle {\n" #~ " width: u32,\n" #~ " height: u32,\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "impl Rectangle {\n" #~ " fn area(&self) -> u32 {\n" #~ " self.width * self.height\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "\n" #~ " fn inc_width(&mut self, delta: u32) {\n" #~ " self.width += delta;\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let mut rect = Rectangle { width: 10, height: 5 };\n" #~ " println!(\"old area: {}\", rect.area());\n" #~ " rect.inc_width(5);\n" #~ " println!(\"new area: {}\", rect.area());\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "struct Rectangle {\n" #~ " width: u32,\n" #~ " height: u32,\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "impl Rectangle {\n" #~ " fn area(&self) -> u32 {\n" #~ " self.width * self.height\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "\n" #~ " fn inc_width(&mut self, delta: u32) {\n" #~ " self.width += delta;\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let mut rect = Rectangle { width: 10, height: 5 };\n" #~ " println!(\"старая площадь: {}\", rect.area());\n" #~ " rect.inc_width(5);\n" #~ " println!(\"новая площадь: {}\", rect.area());\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "We will look much more at methods in today's exercise and in tomorrow's " #~ "class." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Мы подробнее рассмотрим методы в сегодняшнем упражнении и на завтрашнем " #~ "занятии." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Add a static method called `Rectangle::new` and call this from `main`:" #~ msgstr "Добавьте конструктор `Rectangle::new` и вызовите его из `main`:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable,compile_fail\n" #~ "fn new(width: u32, height: u32) -> Rectangle {\n" #~ " Rectangle { width, height }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable,compile_fail\n" #~ "fn new(width: u32, height: u32) -> Rectangle {\n" #~ " Rectangle { width, height }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Add a `Rectangle::square(width: u32)` constructor to illustrate that such " #~ "static methods can take arbitrary parameters." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Добавьте конструктор `Rectangle::new_square(width: u32)`, чтобы показать, " #~ "что конструкторы могут принимать произвольные параметры." #~ msgid "Function Overloading" #~ msgstr "Перегрузка функций" #~ msgid "Overloading is not supported:" #~ msgstr "Перегрузка не поддерживается:" #~ msgid "Always takes a fixed number of parameters." #~ msgstr "Всегда принимает фиксированное количество параметров." #~ msgid "Default values are not supported:" #~ msgstr "Значения по умолчанию не поддерживаются:" #~ msgid "All call sites have the same number of arguments." #~ msgstr "Все вызовы имеют одинаковое количество аргументов." #~ msgid "Macros are sometimes used as an alternative." #~ msgstr "В качестве альтернативы иногда используются макросы." #~ msgid "However, function parameters can be generic:" #~ msgstr "Однако параметры функции могут быть обобщенными:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn pick_one(a: T, b: T) -> T {\n" #~ " if std::process::id() % 2 == 0 { a } else { b }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"coin toss: {}\", pick_one(\"heads\", \"tails\"));\n" #~ " println!(\"cash prize: {}\", pick_one(500, 1000));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn pick_one(a: T, b: T) -> T {\n" #~ " if std::process::id() % 2 == 0 { a } else { b }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"подбрасывание монеты: {}\", pick_one(\"орел\", " #~ "\"решка\"));\n" #~ " println!(\"денежный приз: {}\", pick_one(500, 1000));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "When using generics, the standard library's `Into` can provide a kind " #~ "of limited polymorphism on argument types. We will see more details in a " #~ "later section." #~ msgstr "" #~ "При использовании обобщений тип `Into` из стандартной библиотеки может " #~ "обеспечить своего рода ограниченный полиморфизм в отношении типов " #~ "аргументов. Мы увидим более подробную информацию в следующих разделах." #~ msgid "Day 1: Morning Exercises" #~ msgstr "День 1: Утренние упражнения" #~ msgid "In these exercises, we will explore two parts of Rust:" #~ msgstr "В этих упражнениях мы рассмотрим две составляющие Rust:" #~ msgid "Implicit conversions between types." #~ msgstr "Неявные преобразования между типами." #~ msgid "Arrays and `for` loops." #~ msgstr "Массивы и циклы `for`." #~ msgid "A few things to consider while solving the exercises:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Несколько вещей, которые следует учитывать при выполнении упражнений:" #~ msgid "" #~ "Use a local Rust installation, if possible. This way you can get auto-" #~ "completion in your editor. See the page about [Using Cargo](../../cargo." #~ "md) for details on installing Rust." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Используйте локальную установку Rust, если это возможно. Таким образом вы " #~ "можете получить автодополнение в вашем редакторе. Смотрите страницу " #~ "[Using Cargo](../../cargo.md) для получения подробной информации об " #~ "установке Rust." #~ msgid "Alternatively, use the Rust Playground." #~ msgstr "В качестве альтернативы используйте Rust Playground." #~ msgid "" #~ "The code snippets are not editable on purpose: the inline code snippets " #~ "lose their state if you navigate away from the page." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Фрагменты кода намеренно недоступны для редактирования: встроенные " #~ "фрагменты кода теряют свое состояние, если вы уходите со страницы." #~ msgid "" #~ "Rust will not automatically apply _implicit conversions_ between types " #~ "([unlike C++](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/" #~ "implicit_conversion)). You can see this in a program like this:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Rust не применяет автоматически _неявные преобразования_ между типами ([в " #~ "отличие от C++](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/" #~ "implicit_conversion)). Это можно увидеть в следующей программе:" #~ msgid "" #~ "The Rust integer types all implement the [`From`](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/std/convert/trait.From.html) and [`Into`](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/std/convert/trait.Into.html) traits to let us convert between " #~ "them. The `From` trait has a single `from()` method and similarly, the " #~ "`Into` trait has a single `into()` method. Implementing these traits " #~ "is how a type expresses that it can be converted into another type." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Все целочисленные типы в Rust реализуют типажи [`From`](https://doc." #~ "rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.From.html) и [`Into`](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/std/convert/trait.Into.html), что позволяет выполнять " #~ "преобразования между ними. Типаж `From` имеет единственный метод " #~ "`from()` и аналогично, типаж `Into` имеет единственный метод `into()`. " #~ "Реализация этих типажей --- это то, как тип выражает, что он может быть " #~ "преобразован в другой тип." #~ msgid "" #~ "The standard library has an implementation of `From for i16`, which " #~ "means that we can convert a variable `x` of type `i8` to an `i16` by " #~ "calling `i16::from(x)`. Or, simpler, with `x.into()`, because `From " #~ "for i16` implementation automatically create an implementation of " #~ "`Into for i8`." #~ msgstr "" #~ "В стандартной библиотеке есть реализация `From для i16`, что значит, " #~ "что мы можем преобразовать переменную `x` типа `i8` в `i16`, вызвав `i16::" #~ "from(x)`. Или, проще, с помощью `x.into()`, потому что реализация " #~ "`From для i16` автоматически создает реализацию `Into для i8`." #~ msgid "" #~ "The same applies for your own `From` implementations for your own types, " #~ "so it is sufficient to only implement `From` to get a respective `Into` " #~ "implementation automatically." #~ msgstr "" #~ "То же самое относится к реализациям `From` для ваших собственных типов, " #~ "поэтому достаточно реализовать только `From`, чтобы автоматически " #~ "получить соответствующую реализацию `Into`." #~ msgid "Execute the above program and look at the compiler error." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Запустите приведенную выше программу и посмотрите на ошибку компилятора." #~ msgid "Update the code above to use `into()` to do the conversion." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Измените приведенный выше код, чтобы использовать `into()` для выполнения " #~ "преобразования." #~ msgid "" #~ "Change the types of `x` and `y` to other things (such as `f32`, `bool`, " #~ "`i128`) to see which types you can convert to which other types. Try " #~ "converting small types to big types and the other way around. Check the " #~ "[standard library documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/" #~ "trait.From.html) to see if `From` is implemented for the pairs you " #~ "check." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Измените типы `x` и `y` на другие (такие как `f32`, `bool`, `i128`), " #~ "чтобы увидеть, из каких и в какие типы можно выполнить преобразование. " #~ "Попробуйте преобразовать малые типы в большие и наоборот. Ознакомьтесь c " #~ "[документацией стандартной библиотеки](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/" #~ "convert/trait.From.html), чтобы узнать, реализован ли `From` для " #~ "проверяемых пар." #~ msgid "Arrays and `for` Loops" #~ msgstr "Массивы и циклы `for`" #~ msgid "We saw that an array can be declared like this:" #~ msgstr "Мы видели, что массив может быть объявлен следующим образом:" #~ msgid "" #~ "You can print such an array by asking for its debug representation with " #~ "`{:?}`:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы можете распечатать массив, запросив его отладочное представление " #~ "используя `{:?}`:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let array = [10, 20, 30];\n" #~ " println!(\"array: {array:?}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let array = [10, 20, 30];\n" #~ " println!(\"массив: {array:?}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "Rust lets you iterate over things like arrays and ranges using the `for` " #~ "keyword:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Rust позволяет итерироваться по массивам и диапазонам используя ключевое " #~ "слово `for`:" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let array = [10, 20, 30];\n" #~ " print!(\"Iterating over array:\");\n" #~ " for n in &array {\n" #~ " print!(\" {n}\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "\n" #~ " print!(\"Iterating over range:\");\n" #~ " for i in 0..3 {\n" #~ " print!(\" {}\", array[i]);\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let array = [10, 20, 30];\n" #~ " print!(\"Итерация по массиву:\");\n" #~ " for n in array {\n" #~ " print!(\" {n}\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "\n" #~ " print!(\"Итерация по диапазону:\");\n" #~ " for i in 0..3 {\n" #~ " print!(\" {}\", array[i]);\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!();\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,should_panic\n" #~ "// TODO: remove this when you're done with your implementation.\n" #~ "#![allow(unused_variables, dead_code)]\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn transpose(matrix: [[i32; 3]; 3]) -> [[i32; 3]; 3] {\n" #~ " unimplemented!()\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn pretty_print(matrix: &[[i32; 3]; 3]) {\n" #~ " unimplemented!()\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let matrix = [\n" #~ " [101, 102, 103], // <-- the comment makes rustfmt add a newline\n" #~ " [201, 202, 203],\n" #~ " [301, 302, 303],\n" #~ " ];\n" #~ "\n" #~ " println!(\"matrix:\");\n" #~ " pretty_print(&matrix);\n" #~ "\n" #~ " let transposed = transpose(matrix);\n" #~ " println!(\"transposed:\");\n" #~ " pretty_print(&transposed);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,should_panic\n" #~ "// TODO: удалите это, когда закончите со своей реализацией.\n" #~ "#![allow(unused_variables, dead_code)]\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn transpose(matrix: [[i32; 3]; 3]) -> [[i32; 3]; 3] {\n" #~ " unimplemented!()\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn pretty_print(matrix: &[[i32; 3]; 3]) {\n" #~ " unimplemented!()\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let matrix = [\n" #~ " [101, 102, 103], // <-- комментарий заставляет rustfmt добавить " #~ "переход на новую строку\n" #~ " [201, 202, 203],\n" #~ " [301, 302, 303],\n" #~ " ];\n" #~ "\n" #~ " println!(\"матрица:\");\n" #~ " pretty_print(&matrix);\n" #~ "\n" #~ " let transposed = transpose(matrix);\n" #~ " println!(\"транспонированная матрица:\");\n" #~ " pretty_print(&transposed);\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "Bonus Question" #~ msgstr "Бонусный вопрос" #~ msgid "" #~ "Could you use `&[i32]` slices instead of hard-coded 3 × 3 matrices for " #~ "your argument and return types? Something like `&[&[i32]]` for a two-" #~ "dimensional slice-of-slices. Why or why not?" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Могли бы вы использовать срезы `&[i32]`, вместо жестко закодированных " #~ "матриц 3 × 3, как тип аргументов и возвращаемых значений? Что-то вроде " #~ "`&[&[i32]]` для двумерного среза срезов. Почему или почему нет?" #~ msgid "" #~ "See the [`ndarray` crate](https://docs.rs/ndarray/) for a production " #~ "quality implementation." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Смотрите [пакет `ndarray`](https://docs.rs/ndarray/), чтобы узнать больше " #~ "о реализации многомерных контейнеров." #~ msgid "" #~ "The solution and the answer to the bonus section are available in the " #~ "[Solution](solutions-morning.md#arrays-and-for-loops) section." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Решение и ответ на бонусный вопрос доступны в разделе [Решение](solutions-" #~ "morning.md#arrays-and-for-loops)." #~ msgid "" #~ "As we have seen, `if` is an expression in Rust. It is used to " #~ "conditionally evaluate one of two blocks, but the blocks can have a value " #~ "which then becomes the value of the `if` expression. Other control flow " #~ "expressions work similarly in Rust." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Как мы уже заметили, выражение `if` может использоваться для условного " #~ "выполнения одного из двух блоков. Однако, в Rust сами блоки могут иметь " #~ "значения. Значение одного из двух блоков (в зависимости от значения " #~ "условия) и станет значением всего выражения `if`. Другие выражения " #~ "управления потоком (такие как `while`, `for` и `match`), работают схожим " #~ "образом." #~ msgid "" #~ "The same rule is used for functions: the value of the function body is " #~ "the return value:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "То же правило работает и для функций: функция возвращает значение " #~ "последнего выражения в теле:" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn double(x: i32) -> i32 {\n" #~ " x + x\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"doubled: {}\", double(7));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn double(x: i32) -> i32 {\n" #~ " x + x\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"удвоенное: {}\", double(7));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "The point of this slide is to show that blocks have a type and value in " #~ "Rust. " #~ msgstr "" #~ "Этот слайд показывает, что в языке Rust у блоков есть тип и значение. " #~ msgid "" #~ "The [`for` loop](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/keyword.for.html) is " #~ "closely related to the [`while let` loop](while-let-expressions.md). It " #~ "will automatically call `into_iter()` on the expression and then iterate " #~ "over it:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Выражение [`for`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/keyword.for.html) очень " #~ "похоже на выражение [`while let`](while-let-expressions.md). Оно неявно " #~ "вызывает `into_iter()` для итерируемого объекта:" #~ msgid "You can use `break` and `continue` here as usual." #~ msgstr "Здесь также можно использовать выражения `break` и `continue`." #~ msgid "Index iteration is not a special syntax in Rust for just that case." #~ msgstr "" #~ "В языке Rust нет специального синтаксиса для итерации по индексам " #~ "контейнеров." #~ msgid "`(0..10)` is a range that implements an `Iterator` trait. " #~ msgstr "`(0..10)` -- это диапазон, который реализует трейт `Iterator`. " #~ msgid "" #~ "`step_by` is a method that returns another `Iterator` that skips every " #~ "other element. " #~ msgstr "" #~ "`step_by` -- это метод, который возвращает итератор, который пропускает " #~ "каждый второй элемент. " #~ msgid "" #~ "Modify the elements in the vector and explain the compiler errors. Change " #~ "vector `v` to be mutable and the for loop to `for x in v.iter_mut()`." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Попробуйте присвоить что-нибудь к `x` и объясните ошибки компиляции, " #~ "которые при этом появятся. Сделайте `v` изменяемым и поменяйте цикл `for` " #~ "на `for x in v.iter_mut()`." #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let mut x = 10;\n" #~ " while x != 1 {\n" #~ " x = if x % 2 == 0 {\n" #~ " x / 2\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " 3 * x + 1\n" #~ " };\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!(\"Final x: {x}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let mut x = 10;\n" #~ " while x != 1 {\n" #~ " x = if x % 2 == 0 {\n" #~ " x / 2\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " 3 * x + 1\n" #~ " };\n" #~ " }\n" #~ " println!(\"Конечное значение x: {x}\");\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let arg = std::env::args().next();\n" #~ " if let Some(value) = arg {\n" #~ " println!(\"Program name: {value}\");\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " println!(\"Missing name?\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " let arg = std::env::args().next();\n" #~ " if let Some(value) = arg {\n" #~ " println!(\"Имя программы: {value}\");\n" #~ " } else {\n" #~ " println!(\"Имя не указано.\");\n" #~ " }\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Since 1.65, a similar [let-else](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-" #~ "example/flow_control/let_else.html) construct allows to do a " #~ "destructuring assignment, or if it fails, execute a block which is " #~ "required to abort normal control flow (with `panic`/`return`/`break`/" #~ "`continue`):" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Начиная с версии 1.65, похожая конструкция [`let-else`](https://doc.rust-" #~ "lang.org/rust-by-example/flow_control/let_else.html) позволяет проводить " #~ "деструктурирующее присвоение, а при ошибке исполнить ветку с не " #~ "возвращающим блоком (`panic`/`return`/`break`/`continue`). Например:" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", second_word_to_upper(\"foo bar\"));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ " \n" #~ "fn second_word_to_upper(s: &str) -> Option {\n" #~ " let mut it = s.split(' ');\n" #~ " let (Some(_), Some(item)) = (it.next(), it.next()) else {\n" #~ " return None;\n" #~ " };\n" #~ " Some(item.to_uppercase())\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "\n" #~ "```" #~ msgstr "" #~ "```rust,editable\n" #~ "fn main() {\n" #~ " println!(\"{:?}\", second_word_to_upper(\"foo bar\"));\n" #~ "}\n" #~ " \n" #~ "fn second_word_to_upper(s: &str) -> Option {\n" #~ " let mut it = s.split(' ');\n" #~ " let (Some(_), Some(item)) = (it.next(), it.next()) else {\n" #~ " return None;\n" #~ " };\n" #~ " Some(item.to_uppercase())\n" #~ "}\n" #~ "```" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "An exercise on pattern matching." #~ msgstr "Перечисления и сопоставление с образцом." #~ msgid "" #~ "Memory management: stack vs heap, manual memory management, scope-based " #~ "memory management, and garbage collection." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Управление памятью: стек и куча, ручное управление памятью, управление " #~ "памятью на основе области видимости и сборка мусора." #~ msgid "" #~ "Ownership: move semantics, copying and cloning, borrowing, and lifetimes." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Владение: семантика перемещения, копирование и клонирование, " #~ "заимствование и время жизни." #, fuzzy #~ msgid "" #~ "Use this to model a library's book collection. Copy the code below to " #~ " and update the types to make it compile:" #~ msgstr "" #~ "Скопируйте приведенный ниже код в и " #~ "реализуйте функции:" #, fuzzy #~ msgid "Pattern matching" #~ msgstr "Перечисления и сопоставление с образцом." #~ msgid "Day 1: Basic Rust, ownership and the borrow checker." #~ msgstr "День 1: Базовый Rust, владение и анализатор заимствований." #~ msgid "Rustup (Recommended)" #~ msgstr "Rustup (рекомендуется)" #~ msgid "" #~ "You can follow the instructions to install cargo and rust compiler, among " #~ "other standard ecosystem tools with the [rustup](https://rust-analyzer." #~ "github.io/) tool, which is maintained by the Rust Foundation." #~ msgstr "" #~ "Вы можете следовать инструкции для установки Cargo, компилятора Rust и " #~ "других стандартных инструментов экосистемы с помощью инструмента [rustup]" #~ "(https://rust-analyzer.github.io/), который поддерживается Rust " #~ "Foundation." #~ msgid "Package Managers" #~ msgstr "Менеджеры пакетов"