pub enum Tier {
One,
Two,
Three,
}
Rust platform tiers: support levels are organized into three tiers, each
with a different set of guarantees.
Tier 1 platforms can be thought of as “guaranteed to work”.
Specifically they will each satisfy the following requirements:
- Official binary releases are provided for the platform.
- Automated testing is set up to run tests for the platform.
- Landing changes to the rust-lang/rust repository’s master branch
is gated on tests passing.
- Documentation for how to use and how to build the platform is available.
Tier 2 platforms can be thought of as “guaranteed to build”. Automated
tests are not run so it’s not guaranteed to produce a working build,
but platforms often work to quite a good degree and patches are always
welcome!
Specifically, these platforms are required to have each of the following:
- Official binary releases are provided for the platform.
- Automated building is set up, but may not be running tests.
- Landing changes to the rust-lang/rust repository’s master branch is
gated on platforms building. For some platforms only the standard
library is compiled, but for others rustc and cargo are too.
Tier 3 platforms are those which the Rust codebase has support for, but
which are not built or tested automatically, and may not work.
Official builds are not available.
Get a number identifying this tier
Get a string identifying this tier
Performs copy-assignment from source
. Read more
Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more
Feeds this value into the given [Hasher
]. Read more
Feeds a slice of this type into the given [Hasher
]. Read more
This method tests for self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
. Read more
This method tests for !=
.
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the >=
operator. Read more
This method returns an Ordering
between self
and other
. Read more
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Self | 1.21.0 [src] |
Compares and returns the maximum of two values. Read more
fn min(self, other: Self) -> Self | 1.21.0 [src] |
Compares and returns the minimum of two values. Read more