| //! Primitive traits and types representing basic properties of types. |
| //! |
| //! Rust types can be classified in various useful ways according to |
| //! their intrinsic properties. These classifications are represented |
| //! as traits. |
| |
| #![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| |
| mod variance; |
| |
| #[unstable(feature = "phantom_variance_markers", issue = "135806")] |
| pub use self::variance::{ |
| PhantomContravariant, PhantomContravariantLifetime, PhantomCovariant, PhantomCovariantLifetime, |
| PhantomInvariant, PhantomInvariantLifetime, Variance, variance, |
| }; |
| use crate::cell::UnsafeCell; |
| use crate::cmp; |
| use crate::fmt::Debug; |
| use crate::hash::{Hash, Hasher}; |
| use crate::pin::UnsafePinned; |
| |
| // NOTE: for consistent error messages between `core` and `minicore`, all `diagnostic` attributes |
| // should be replicated exactly in `minicore` (if `minicore` defines the item). |
| |
| /// Implements a given marker trait for multiple types at the same time. |
| /// |
| /// The basic syntax looks like this: |
| /// ```ignore private macro |
| /// marker_impls! { MarkerTrait for u8, i8 } |
| /// ``` |
| /// You can also implement `unsafe` traits |
| /// ```ignore private macro |
| /// marker_impls! { unsafe MarkerTrait for u8, i8 } |
| /// ``` |
| /// Add attributes to all impls: |
| /// ```ignore private macro |
| /// marker_impls! { |
| /// #[allow(lint)] |
| /// #[unstable(feature = "marker_trait", issue = "none")] |
| /// MarkerTrait for u8, i8 |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// And use generics: |
| /// ```ignore private macro |
| /// marker_impls! { |
| /// MarkerTrait for |
| /// u8, i8, |
| /// {T: ?Sized} *const T, |
| /// {T: ?Sized} *mut T, |
| /// {T: MarkerTrait} PhantomData<T>, |
| /// u32, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| #[unstable(feature = "internal_impls_macro", issue = "none")] |
| // Allow implementations of `UnsizedConstParamTy` even though std cannot use that feature. |
| #[allow_internal_unstable(unsized_const_params)] |
| macro marker_impls { |
| ( $(#[$($meta:tt)*])* $Trait:ident for $({$($bounds:tt)*})? $T:ty $(, $($rest:tt)*)? ) => { |
| $(#[$($meta)*])* impl< $($($bounds)*)? > $Trait for $T {} |
| marker_impls! { $(#[$($meta)*])* $Trait for $($($rest)*)? } |
| }, |
| ( $(#[$($meta:tt)*])* $Trait:ident for ) => {}, |
| |
| ( $(#[$($meta:tt)*])* unsafe $Trait:ident for $({$($bounds:tt)*})? $T:ty $(, $($rest:tt)*)? ) => { |
| $(#[$($meta)*])* unsafe impl< $($($bounds)*)? > $Trait for $T {} |
| marker_impls! { $(#[$($meta)*])* unsafe $Trait for $($($rest)*)? } |
| }, |
| ( $(#[$($meta:tt)*])* unsafe $Trait:ident for ) => {}, |
| } |
| |
| /// Types that can be transferred across thread boundaries. |
| /// |
| /// This trait is automatically implemented when the compiler determines it's |
| /// appropriate. |
| /// |
| /// An example of a non-`Send` type is the reference-counting pointer |
| /// [`rc::Rc`][`Rc`]. If two threads attempt to clone [`Rc`]s that point to the same |
| /// reference-counted value, they might try to update the reference count at the |
| /// same time, which is [undefined behavior][ub] because [`Rc`] doesn't use atomic |
| /// operations. Its cousin [`sync::Arc`][arc] does use atomic operations (incurring |
| /// some overhead) and thus is `Send`. |
| /// |
| /// See [the Nomicon](../../nomicon/send-and-sync.html) and the [`Sync`] trait for more details. |
| /// |
| /// [`Rc`]: ../../std/rc/struct.Rc.html |
| /// [arc]: ../../std/sync/struct.Arc.html |
| /// [ub]: ../../reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_diagnostic_item = "Send"] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented( |
| message = "`{Self}` cannot be sent between threads safely", |
| label = "`{Self}` cannot be sent between threads safely" |
| )] |
| pub unsafe auto trait Send { |
| // empty. |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> !Send for *const T {} |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> !Send for *mut T {} |
| |
| // Most instances arise automatically, but this instance is needed to link up `T: Sync` with |
| // `&T: Send` (and it also removes the unsound default instance `T Send` -> `&T: Send` that would |
| // otherwise exist). |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| unsafe impl<T: Sync + PointeeSized> Send for &T {} |
| |
| /// Types with a constant size known at compile time. |
| /// |
| /// All type parameters have an implicit bound of `Sized`. The special syntax |
| /// `?Sized` can be used to remove this bound if it's not appropriate. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| /// struct Foo<T>(T); |
| /// struct Bar<T: ?Sized>(T); |
| /// |
| /// // struct FooUse(Foo<[i32]>); // error: Sized is not implemented for [i32] |
| /// struct BarUse(Bar<[i32]>); // OK |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// The one exception is the implicit `Self` type of a trait. A trait does not |
| /// have an implicit `Sized` bound as this is incompatible with [trait object]s |
| /// where, by definition, the trait needs to work with all possible implementors, |
| /// and thus could be any size. |
| /// |
| /// Although Rust will let you bind `Sized` to a trait, you won't |
| /// be able to use it to form a trait object later: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(unused_variables)] |
| /// trait Foo { } |
| /// trait Bar: Sized { } |
| /// |
| /// struct Impl; |
| /// impl Foo for Impl { } |
| /// impl Bar for Impl { } |
| /// |
| /// let x: &dyn Foo = &Impl; // OK |
| /// // let y: &dyn Bar = &Impl; // error: the trait `Bar` cannot be made into an object |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// [trait object]: ../../book/ch17-02-trait-objects.html |
| #[doc(alias = "?", alias = "?Sized")] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[lang = "sized"] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented( |
| message = "the size for values of type `{Self}` cannot be known at compilation time", |
| label = "doesn't have a size known at compile-time" |
| )] |
| #[fundamental] // for Default, for example, which requires that `[T]: !Default` be evaluatable |
| #[rustc_specialization_trait] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| // `Sized` being coinductive, despite having supertraits, is okay as there are no user-written impls, |
| // and we know that the supertraits are always implemented if the subtrait is just by looking at |
| // the builtin impls. |
| #[rustc_coinductive] |
| pub trait Sized: MetaSized { |
| // Empty. |
| } |
| |
| /// Types with a size that can be determined from pointer metadata. |
| #[unstable(feature = "sized_hierarchy", issue = "none")] |
| #[lang = "meta_sized"] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented( |
| message = "the size for values of type `{Self}` cannot be known", |
| label = "doesn't have a known size" |
| )] |
| #[fundamental] |
| #[rustc_specialization_trait] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| // `MetaSized` being coinductive, despite having supertraits, is okay for the same reasons as |
| // `Sized` above. |
| #[rustc_coinductive] |
| pub trait MetaSized: PointeeSized { |
| // Empty |
| } |
| |
| /// Types that may or may not have a size. |
| #[unstable(feature = "sized_hierarchy", issue = "none")] |
| #[lang = "pointee_sized"] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented( |
| message = "values of type `{Self}` may or may not have a size", |
| label = "may or may not have a known size" |
| )] |
| #[fundamental] |
| #[rustc_specialization_trait] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| #[rustc_coinductive] |
| pub trait PointeeSized { |
| // Empty |
| } |
| |
| /// Types that can be "unsized" to a dynamically-sized type. |
| /// |
| /// For example, the sized array type `[i8; 2]` implements `Unsize<[i8]>` and |
| /// `Unsize<dyn fmt::Debug>`. |
| /// |
| /// All implementations of `Unsize` are provided automatically by the compiler. |
| /// Those implementations are: |
| /// |
| /// - Arrays `[T; N]` implement `Unsize<[T]>`. |
| /// - A type implements `Unsize<dyn Trait + 'a>` if all of these conditions are met: |
| /// - The type implements `Trait`. |
| /// - `Trait` is dyn-compatible[^1]. |
| /// - The type is sized. |
| /// - The type outlives `'a`. |
| /// - Trait objects `dyn TraitA + AutoA... + 'a` implement `Unsize<dyn TraitB + AutoB... + 'b>` |
| /// if all of these conditions are met: |
| /// - `TraitB` is a supertrait of `TraitA`. |
| /// - `AutoB...` is a subset of `AutoA...`. |
| /// - `'a` outlives `'b`. |
| /// - Structs `Foo<..., T1, ..., Tn, ...>` implement `Unsize<Foo<..., U1, ..., Un, ...>>` |
| /// where any number of (type and const) parameters may be changed if all of these conditions |
| /// are met: |
| /// - Only the last field of `Foo` has a type involving the parameters `T1`, ..., `Tn`. |
| /// - All other parameters of the struct are equal. |
| /// - `Field<T1, ..., Tn>: Unsize<Field<U1, ..., Un>>`, where `Field<...>` stands for the actual |
| /// type of the struct's last field. |
| /// |
| /// `Unsize` is used along with [`ops::CoerceUnsized`] to allow |
| /// "user-defined" containers such as [`Rc`] to contain dynamically-sized |
| /// types. See the [DST coercion RFC][RFC982] and [the nomicon entry on coercion][nomicon-coerce] |
| /// for more details. |
| /// |
| /// [`ops::CoerceUnsized`]: crate::ops::CoerceUnsized |
| /// [`Rc`]: ../../std/rc/struct.Rc.html |
| /// [RFC982]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0982-dst-coercion.md |
| /// [nomicon-coerce]: ../../nomicon/coercions.html |
| /// [^1]: Formerly known as *object safe*. |
| #[unstable(feature = "unsize", issue = "18598")] |
| #[lang = "unsize"] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| pub trait Unsize<T: PointeeSized>: PointeeSized { |
| // Empty. |
| } |
| |
| /// Required trait for constants used in pattern matches. |
| /// |
| /// Constants are only allowed as patterns if (a) their type implements |
| /// `PartialEq`, and (b) interpreting the value of the constant as a pattern |
| /// is equivalent to calling `PartialEq`. This ensures that constants used as |
| /// patterns cannot expose implementation details in an unexpected way or |
| /// cause semver hazards. |
| /// |
| /// This trait ensures point (b). |
| /// Any type that derives `PartialEq` automatically implements this trait. |
| /// |
| /// Implementing this trait (which is unstable) is a way for type authors to explicitly allow |
| /// comparing const values of this type; that operation will recursively compare all fields |
| /// (including private fields), even if that behavior differs from `PartialEq`. This can make it |
| /// semver-breaking to add further private fields to a type. |
| #[unstable(feature = "structural_match", issue = "31434")] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented(message = "the type `{Self}` does not `#[derive(PartialEq)]`")] |
| #[lang = "structural_peq"] |
| pub trait StructuralPartialEq { |
| // Empty. |
| } |
| |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[unstable(feature = "structural_match", issue = "31434")] |
| StructuralPartialEq for |
| usize, u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, |
| isize, i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, |
| bool, |
| char, |
| str /* Technically requires `[u8]: StructuralPartialEq` */, |
| (), |
| {T, const N: usize} [T; N], |
| {T} [T], |
| {T: PointeeSized} &T, |
| } |
| |
| /// Types whose values can be duplicated simply by copying bits. |
| /// |
| /// By default, variable bindings have 'move semantics.' In other |
| /// words: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #[derive(Debug)] |
| /// struct Foo; |
| /// |
| /// let x = Foo; |
| /// |
| /// let y = x; |
| /// |
| /// // `x` has moved into `y`, and so cannot be used |
| /// |
| /// // println!("{x:?}"); // error: use of moved value |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// However, if a type implements `Copy`, it instead has 'copy semantics': |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// // We can derive a `Copy` implementation. `Clone` is also required, as it's |
| /// // a supertrait of `Copy`. |
| /// #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)] |
| /// struct Foo; |
| /// |
| /// let x = Foo; |
| /// |
| /// let y = x; |
| /// |
| /// // `y` is a copy of `x` |
| /// |
| /// println!("{x:?}"); // A-OK! |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// It's important to note that in these two examples, the only difference is whether you |
| /// are allowed to access `x` after the assignment. Under the hood, both a copy and a move |
| /// can result in bits being copied in memory, although this is sometimes optimized away. |
| /// |
| /// ## How can I implement `Copy`? |
| /// |
| /// There are two ways to implement `Copy` on your type. The simplest is to use `derive`: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #[derive(Copy, Clone)] |
| /// struct MyStruct; |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// You can also implement `Copy` and `Clone` manually: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// struct MyStruct; |
| /// |
| /// impl Copy for MyStruct { } |
| /// |
| /// impl Clone for MyStruct { |
| /// fn clone(&self) -> MyStruct { |
| /// *self |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// There is a small difference between the two. The `derive` strategy will also place a `Copy` |
| /// bound on type parameters: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #[derive(Clone)] |
| /// struct MyStruct<T>(T); |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: Copy> Copy for MyStruct<T> { } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// This isn't always desired. For example, shared references (`&T`) can be copied regardless of |
| /// whether `T` is `Copy`. Likewise, a generic struct containing markers such as [`PhantomData`] |
| /// could potentially be duplicated with a bit-wise copy. |
| /// |
| /// ## What's the difference between `Copy` and `Clone`? |
| /// |
| /// Copies happen implicitly, for example as part of an assignment `y = x`. The behavior of |
| /// `Copy` is not overloadable; it is always a simple bit-wise copy. |
| /// |
| /// Cloning is an explicit action, `x.clone()`. The implementation of [`Clone`] can |
| /// provide any type-specific behavior necessary to duplicate values safely. For example, |
| /// the implementation of [`Clone`] for [`String`] needs to copy the pointed-to string |
| /// buffer in the heap. A simple bitwise copy of [`String`] values would merely copy the |
| /// pointer, leading to a double free down the line. For this reason, [`String`] is [`Clone`] |
| /// but not `Copy`. |
| /// |
| /// [`Clone`] is a supertrait of `Copy`, so everything which is `Copy` must also implement |
| /// [`Clone`]. If a type is `Copy` then its [`Clone`] implementation only needs to return `*self` |
| /// (see the example above). |
| /// |
| /// ## When can my type be `Copy`? |
| /// |
| /// A type can implement `Copy` if all of its components implement `Copy`. For example, this |
| /// struct can be `Copy`: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #[allow(dead_code)] |
| /// #[derive(Copy, Clone)] |
| /// struct Point { |
| /// x: i32, |
| /// y: i32, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// A struct can be `Copy`, and [`i32`] is `Copy`, therefore `Point` is eligible to be `Copy`. |
| /// By contrast, consider |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| /// # struct Point; |
| /// struct PointList { |
| /// points: Vec<Point>, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// The struct `PointList` cannot implement `Copy`, because [`Vec<T>`] is not `Copy`. If we |
| /// attempt to derive a `Copy` implementation, we'll get an error: |
| /// |
| /// ```text |
| /// the trait `Copy` cannot be implemented for this type; field `points` does not implement `Copy` |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Shared references (`&T`) are also `Copy`, so a type can be `Copy`, even when it holds |
| /// shared references of types `T` that are *not* `Copy`. Consider the following struct, |
| /// which can implement `Copy`, because it only holds a *shared reference* to our non-`Copy` |
| /// type `PointList` from above: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| /// # struct PointList; |
| /// #[derive(Copy, Clone)] |
| /// struct PointListWrapper<'a> { |
| /// point_list_ref: &'a PointList, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ## When *can't* my type be `Copy`? |
| /// |
| /// Some types can't be copied safely. For example, copying `&mut T` would create an aliased |
| /// mutable reference. Copying [`String`] would duplicate responsibility for managing the |
| /// [`String`]'s buffer, leading to a double free. |
| /// |
| /// Generalizing the latter case, any type implementing [`Drop`] can't be `Copy`, because it's |
| /// managing some resource besides its own [`size_of::<T>`] bytes. |
| /// |
| /// If you try to implement `Copy` on a struct or enum containing non-`Copy` data, you will get |
| /// the error [E0204]. |
| /// |
| /// [E0204]: ../../error_codes/E0204.html |
| /// |
| /// ## When *should* my type be `Copy`? |
| /// |
| /// Generally speaking, if your type _can_ implement `Copy`, it should. Keep in mind, though, |
| /// that implementing `Copy` is part of the public API of your type. If the type might become |
| /// non-`Copy` in the future, it could be prudent to omit the `Copy` implementation now, to |
| /// avoid a breaking API change. |
| /// |
| /// ## Additional implementors |
| /// |
| /// In addition to the [implementors listed below][impls], |
| /// the following types also implement `Copy`: |
| /// |
| /// * Function item types (i.e., the distinct types defined for each function) |
| /// * Function pointer types (e.g., `fn() -> i32`) |
| /// * Closure types, if they capture no value from the environment |
| /// or if all such captured values implement `Copy` themselves. |
| /// Note that variables captured by shared reference always implement `Copy` |
| /// (even if the referent doesn't), |
| /// while variables captured by mutable reference never implement `Copy`. |
| /// |
| /// [`Vec<T>`]: ../../std/vec/struct.Vec.html |
| /// [`String`]: ../../std/string/struct.String.html |
| /// [`size_of::<T>`]: size_of |
| /// [impls]: #implementors |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[lang = "copy"] |
| // FIXME(matthewjasper) This allows copying a type that doesn't implement |
| // `Copy` because of unsatisfied lifetime bounds (copying `A<'_>` when only |
| // `A<'static>: Copy` and `A<'_>: Clone`). |
| // We have this attribute here for now only because there are quite a few |
| // existing specializations on `Copy` that already exist in the standard |
| // library, and there's no way to safely have this behavior right now. |
| #[rustc_unsafe_specialization_marker] |
| #[rustc_diagnostic_item = "Copy"] |
| pub trait Copy: Clone { |
| // Empty. |
| } |
| |
| /// Derive macro generating an impl of the trait `Copy`. |
| #[rustc_builtin_macro] |
| #[stable(feature = "builtin_macro_prelude", since = "1.38.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable(core_intrinsics, derive_clone_copy)] |
| pub macro Copy($item:item) { |
| /* compiler built-in */ |
| } |
| |
| // Implementations of `Copy` for primitive types. |
| // |
| // Implementations that cannot be described in Rust |
| // are implemented in `traits::SelectionContext::copy_clone_conditions()` |
| // in `rustc_trait_selection`. |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| Copy for |
| usize, u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, |
| isize, i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, |
| f16, f32, f64, f128, |
| bool, char, |
| {T: PointeeSized} *const T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} *mut T, |
| |
| } |
| |
| #[unstable(feature = "never_type", issue = "35121")] |
| impl Copy for ! {} |
| |
| /// Shared references can be copied, but mutable references *cannot*! |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> Copy for &T {} |
| |
| /// Marker trait for the types that are allowed in union fields and unsafe |
| /// binder types. |
| /// |
| /// Implemented for: |
| /// * `&T`, `&mut T` for all `T`, |
| /// * `ManuallyDrop<T>` for all `T`, |
| /// * tuples and arrays whose elements implement `BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop`, |
| /// * or otherwise, all types that are `Copy`. |
| /// |
| /// Notably, this doesn't include all trivially-destructible types for semver |
| /// reasons. |
| /// |
| /// Bikeshed name for now. This trait does not do anything other than reflect the |
| /// set of types that are allowed within unions for field validity. |
| #[unstable(feature = "bikeshed_guaranteed_no_drop", issue = "none")] |
| #[lang = "bikeshed_guaranteed_no_drop"] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| #[doc(hidden)] |
| pub trait BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop {} |
| |
| /// Types for which it is safe to share references between threads. |
| /// |
| /// This trait is automatically implemented when the compiler determines |
| /// it's appropriate. |
| /// |
| /// The precise definition is: a type `T` is [`Sync`] if and only if `&T` is |
| /// [`Send`]. In other words, if there is no possibility of |
| /// [undefined behavior][ub] (including data races) when passing |
| /// `&T` references between threads. |
| /// |
| /// As one would expect, primitive types like [`u8`] and [`f64`] |
| /// are all [`Sync`], and so are simple aggregate types containing them, |
| /// like tuples, structs and enums. More examples of basic [`Sync`] |
| /// types include "immutable" types like `&T`, and those with simple |
| /// inherited mutability, such as [`Box<T>`][box], [`Vec<T>`][vec] and |
| /// most other collection types. (Generic parameters need to be [`Sync`] |
| /// for their container to be [`Sync`].) |
| /// |
| /// A somewhat surprising consequence of the definition is that `&mut T` |
| /// is `Sync` (if `T` is `Sync`) even though it seems like that might |
| /// provide unsynchronized mutation. The trick is that a mutable |
| /// reference behind a shared reference (that is, `& &mut T`) |
| /// becomes read-only, as if it were a `& &T`. Hence there is no risk |
| /// of a data race. |
| /// |
| /// A shorter overview of how [`Sync`] and [`Send`] relate to referencing: |
| /// * `&T` is [`Send`] if and only if `T` is [`Sync`] |
| /// * `&mut T` is [`Send`] if and only if `T` is [`Send`] |
| /// * `&T` and `&mut T` are [`Sync`] if and only if `T` is [`Sync`] |
| /// |
| /// Types that are not `Sync` are those that have "interior |
| /// mutability" in a non-thread-safe form, such as [`Cell`][cell] |
| /// and [`RefCell`][refcell]. These types allow for mutation of |
| /// their contents even through an immutable, shared reference. For |
| /// example the `set` method on [`Cell<T>`][cell] takes `&self`, so it requires |
| /// only a shared reference [`&Cell<T>`][cell]. The method performs no |
| /// synchronization, thus [`Cell`][cell] cannot be `Sync`. |
| /// |
| /// Another example of a non-`Sync` type is the reference-counting |
| /// pointer [`Rc`][rc]. Given any reference [`&Rc<T>`][rc], you can clone |
| /// a new [`Rc<T>`][rc], modifying the reference counts in a non-atomic way. |
| /// |
| /// For cases when one does need thread-safe interior mutability, |
| /// Rust provides [atomic data types], as well as explicit locking via |
| /// [`sync::Mutex`][mutex] and [`sync::RwLock`][rwlock]. These types |
| /// ensure that any mutation cannot cause data races, hence the types |
| /// are `Sync`. Likewise, [`sync::Arc`][arc] provides a thread-safe |
| /// analogue of [`Rc`][rc]. |
| /// |
| /// Any types with interior mutability must also use the |
| /// [`cell::UnsafeCell`][unsafecell] wrapper around the value(s) which |
| /// can be mutated through a shared reference. Failing to doing this is |
| /// [undefined behavior][ub]. For example, [`transmute`][transmute]-ing |
| /// from `&T` to `&mut T` is invalid. |
| /// |
| /// See [the Nomicon][nomicon-send-and-sync] for more details about `Sync`. |
| /// |
| /// [box]: ../../std/boxed/struct.Box.html |
| /// [vec]: ../../std/vec/struct.Vec.html |
| /// [cell]: crate::cell::Cell |
| /// [refcell]: crate::cell::RefCell |
| /// [rc]: ../../std/rc/struct.Rc.html |
| /// [arc]: ../../std/sync/struct.Arc.html |
| /// [atomic data types]: crate::sync::atomic |
| /// [mutex]: ../../std/sync/struct.Mutex.html |
| /// [rwlock]: ../../std/sync/struct.RwLock.html |
| /// [unsafecell]: crate::cell::UnsafeCell |
| /// [ub]: ../../reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html |
| /// [transmute]: crate::mem::transmute |
| /// [nomicon-send-and-sync]: ../../nomicon/send-and-sync.html |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_diagnostic_item = "Sync"] |
| #[lang = "sync"] |
| #[rustc_on_unimplemented( |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::once::OnceCell<T>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::OnceLock` instead" |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<u8>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicU8` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<u16>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicU16` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<u32>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicU32` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<u64>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicU64` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<usize>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicUsize` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<i8>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicI8` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<i16>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicI16` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<i32>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicI32` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<i64>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicI64` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<isize>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicIsize` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<bool>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` or `std::sync::atomic::AtomicBool` instead", |
| ), |
| on( |
| all( |
| Self = "core::cell::Cell<T>", |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<u8>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<u16>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<u32>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<u64>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<usize>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<i8>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<i16>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<i32>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<i64>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<isize>"), |
| not(Self = "core::cell::Cell<bool>") |
| ), |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock`", |
| ), |
| on( |
| Self = "core::cell::RefCell<T>", |
| note = "if you want to do aliasing and mutation between multiple threads, use `std::sync::RwLock` instead", |
| ), |
| message = "`{Self}` cannot be shared between threads safely", |
| label = "`{Self}` cannot be shared between threads safely" |
| )] |
| pub unsafe auto trait Sync { |
| // FIXME(estebank): once support to add notes in `rustc_on_unimplemented` |
| // lands in beta, and it has been extended to check whether a closure is |
| // anywhere in the requirement chain, extend it as such (#48534): |
| // ``` |
| // on( |
| // closure, |
| // note="`{Self}` cannot be shared safely, consider marking the closure `move`" |
| // ), |
| // ``` |
| |
| // Empty |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> !Sync for *const T {} |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> !Sync for *mut T {} |
| |
| /// Zero-sized type used to mark things that "act like" they own a `T`. |
| /// |
| /// Adding a `PhantomData<T>` field to your type tells the compiler that your |
| /// type acts as though it stores a value of type `T`, even though it doesn't |
| /// really. This information is used when computing certain safety properties. |
| /// |
| /// For a more in-depth explanation of how to use `PhantomData<T>`, please see |
| /// [the Nomicon](../../nomicon/phantom-data.html). |
| /// |
| /// # A ghastly note 👻👻👻 |
| /// |
| /// Though they both have scary names, `PhantomData` and 'phantom types' are |
| /// related, but not identical. A phantom type parameter is simply a type |
| /// parameter which is never used. In Rust, this often causes the compiler to |
| /// complain, and the solution is to add a "dummy" use by way of `PhantomData`. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ## Unused lifetime parameters |
| /// |
| /// Perhaps the most common use case for `PhantomData` is a struct that has an |
| /// unused lifetime parameter, typically as part of some unsafe code. For |
| /// example, here is a struct `Slice` that has two pointers of type `*const T`, |
| /// presumably pointing into an array somewhere: |
| /// |
| /// ```compile_fail,E0392 |
| /// struct Slice<'a, T> { |
| /// start: *const T, |
| /// end: *const T, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// The intention is that the underlying data is only valid for the |
| /// lifetime `'a`, so `Slice` should not outlive `'a`. However, this |
| /// intent is not expressed in the code, since there are no uses of |
| /// the lifetime `'a` and hence it is not clear what data it applies |
| /// to. We can correct this by telling the compiler to act *as if* the |
| /// `Slice` struct contained a reference `&'a T`: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use std::marker::PhantomData; |
| /// |
| /// # #[allow(dead_code)] |
| /// struct Slice<'a, T> { |
| /// start: *const T, |
| /// end: *const T, |
| /// phantom: PhantomData<&'a T>, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// This also in turn infers the lifetime bound `T: 'a`, indicating |
| /// that any references in `T` are valid over the lifetime `'a`. |
| /// |
| /// When initializing a `Slice` you simply provide the value |
| /// `PhantomData` for the field `phantom`: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| /// # use std::marker::PhantomData; |
| /// # struct Slice<'a, T> { |
| /// # start: *const T, |
| /// # end: *const T, |
| /// # phantom: PhantomData<&'a T>, |
| /// # } |
| /// fn borrow_vec<T>(vec: &Vec<T>) -> Slice<'_, T> { |
| /// let ptr = vec.as_ptr(); |
| /// Slice { |
| /// start: ptr, |
| /// end: unsafe { ptr.add(vec.len()) }, |
| /// phantom: PhantomData, |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ## Unused type parameters |
| /// |
| /// It sometimes happens that you have unused type parameters which |
| /// indicate what type of data a struct is "tied" to, even though that |
| /// data is not actually found in the struct itself. Here is an |
| /// example where this arises with [FFI]. The foreign interface uses |
| /// handles of type `*mut ()` to refer to Rust values of different |
| /// types. We track the Rust type using a phantom type parameter on |
| /// the struct `ExternalResource` which wraps a handle. |
| /// |
| /// [FFI]: ../../book/ch19-01-unsafe-rust.html#using-extern-functions-to-call-external-code |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| /// # trait ResType { } |
| /// # struct ParamType; |
| /// # mod foreign_lib { |
| /// # pub fn new(_: usize) -> *mut () { 42 as *mut () } |
| /// # pub fn do_stuff(_: *mut (), _: usize) {} |
| /// # } |
| /// # fn convert_params(_: ParamType) -> usize { 42 } |
| /// use std::marker::PhantomData; |
| /// |
| /// struct ExternalResource<R> { |
| /// resource_handle: *mut (), |
| /// resource_type: PhantomData<R>, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<R: ResType> ExternalResource<R> { |
| /// fn new() -> Self { |
| /// let size_of_res = size_of::<R>(); |
| /// Self { |
| /// resource_handle: foreign_lib::new(size_of_res), |
| /// resource_type: PhantomData, |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// fn do_stuff(&self, param: ParamType) { |
| /// let foreign_params = convert_params(param); |
| /// foreign_lib::do_stuff(self.resource_handle, foreign_params); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ## Ownership and the drop check |
| /// |
| /// The exact interaction of `PhantomData` with drop check **may change in the future**. |
| /// |
| /// Currently, adding a field of type `PhantomData<T>` indicates that your type *owns* data of type |
| /// `T` in very rare circumstances. This in turn has effects on the Rust compiler's [drop check] |
| /// analysis. For the exact rules, see the [drop check] documentation. |
| /// |
| /// ## Layout |
| /// |
| /// For all `T`, the following are guaranteed: |
| /// * `size_of::<PhantomData<T>>() == 0` |
| /// * `align_of::<PhantomData<T>>() == 1` |
| /// |
| /// [drop check]: Drop#drop-check |
| #[lang = "phantom_data"] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub struct PhantomData<T: PointeeSized>; |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> Hash for PhantomData<T> { |
| #[inline] |
| fn hash<H: Hasher>(&self, _: &mut H) {} |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> cmp::PartialEq for PhantomData<T> { |
| fn eq(&self, _other: &PhantomData<T>) -> bool { |
| true |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> cmp::Eq for PhantomData<T> {} |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> cmp::PartialOrd for PhantomData<T> { |
| fn partial_cmp(&self, _other: &PhantomData<T>) -> Option<cmp::Ordering> { |
| Option::Some(cmp::Ordering::Equal) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> cmp::Ord for PhantomData<T> { |
| fn cmp(&self, _other: &PhantomData<T>) -> cmp::Ordering { |
| cmp::Ordering::Equal |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> Copy for PhantomData<T> {} |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> Clone for PhantomData<T> { |
| fn clone(&self) -> Self { |
| Self |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_default", issue = "143894")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> const Default for PhantomData<T> { |
| fn default() -> Self { |
| Self |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[unstable(feature = "structural_match", issue = "31434")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> StructuralPartialEq for PhantomData<T> {} |
| |
| /// Compiler-internal trait used to indicate the type of enum discriminants. |
| /// |
| /// This trait is automatically implemented for every type and does not add any |
| /// guarantees to [`mem::Discriminant`]. It is **undefined behavior** to transmute |
| /// between `DiscriminantKind::Discriminant` and `mem::Discriminant`. |
| /// |
| /// [`mem::Discriminant`]: crate::mem::Discriminant |
| #[unstable( |
| feature = "discriminant_kind", |
| issue = "none", |
| reason = "this trait is unlikely to ever be stabilized, use `mem::discriminant` instead" |
| )] |
| #[lang = "discriminant_kind"] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| pub trait DiscriminantKind { |
| /// The type of the discriminant, which must satisfy the trait |
| /// bounds required by `mem::Discriminant`. |
| #[lang = "discriminant_type"] |
| type Discriminant: Clone + Copy + Debug + Eq + PartialEq + Hash + Send + Sync + Unpin; |
| } |
| |
| /// Used to determine whether a type contains |
| /// any `UnsafeCell` internally, but not through an indirection. |
| /// This affects, for example, whether a `static` of that type is |
| /// placed in read-only static memory or writable static memory. |
| /// This can be used to declare that a constant with a generic type |
| /// will not contain interior mutability, and subsequently allow |
| /// placing the constant behind references. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// This trait is a core part of the language, it is just expressed as a trait in libcore for |
| /// convenience. Do *not* implement it for other types. |
| // FIXME: Eventually this trait should become `#[rustc_deny_explicit_impl]`. |
| // That requires porting the impls below to native internal impls. |
| #[lang = "freeze"] |
| #[unstable(feature = "freeze", issue = "121675")] |
| pub unsafe auto trait Freeze {} |
| |
| #[unstable(feature = "freeze", issue = "121675")] |
| impl<T: PointeeSized> !Freeze for UnsafeCell<T> {} |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[unstable(feature = "freeze", issue = "121675")] |
| unsafe Freeze for |
| {T: PointeeSized} PhantomData<T>, |
| {T: PointeeSized} *const T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} *mut T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} &T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} &mut T, |
| } |
| |
| /// Used to determine whether a type contains any `UnsafePinned` (or `PhantomPinned`) internally, |
| /// but not through an indirection. This affects, for example, whether we emit `noalias` metadata |
| /// for `&mut T` or not. |
| /// |
| /// This is part of [RFC 3467](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3467-unsafe-pinned.html), and is |
| /// tracked by [#125735](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125735). |
| #[lang = "unsafe_unpin"] |
| pub(crate) unsafe auto trait UnsafeUnpin {} |
| |
| impl<T: ?Sized> !UnsafeUnpin for UnsafePinned<T> {} |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> UnsafeUnpin for PhantomData<T> {} |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> UnsafeUnpin for *const T {} |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> UnsafeUnpin for *mut T {} |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> UnsafeUnpin for &T {} |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> UnsafeUnpin for &mut T {} |
| |
| /// Types that do not require any pinning guarantees. |
| /// |
| /// For information on what "pinning" is, see the [`pin` module] documentation. |
| /// |
| /// Implementing the `Unpin` trait for `T` expresses the fact that `T` is pinning-agnostic: |
| /// it shall not expose nor rely on any pinning guarantees. This, in turn, means that a |
| /// `Pin`-wrapped pointer to such a type can feature a *fully unrestricted* API. |
| /// In other words, if `T: Unpin`, a value of type `T` will *not* be bound by the invariants |
| /// which pinning otherwise offers, even when "pinned" by a [`Pin<Ptr>`] pointing at it. |
| /// When a value of type `T` is pointed at by a [`Pin<Ptr>`], [`Pin`] will not restrict access |
| /// to the pointee value like it normally would, thus allowing the user to do anything that they |
| /// normally could with a non-[`Pin`]-wrapped `Ptr` to that value. |
| /// |
| /// The idea of this trait is to alleviate the reduced ergonomics of APIs that require the use |
| /// of [`Pin`] for soundness for some types, but which also want to be used by other types that |
| /// don't care about pinning. The prime example of such an API is [`Future::poll`]. There are many |
| /// [`Future`] types that don't care about pinning. These futures can implement `Unpin` and |
| /// therefore get around the pinning related restrictions in the API, while still allowing the |
| /// subset of [`Future`]s which *do* require pinning to be implemented soundly. |
| /// |
| /// For more discussion on the consequences of [`Unpin`] within the wider scope of the pinning |
| /// system, see the [section about `Unpin`] in the [`pin` module]. |
| /// |
| /// `Unpin` has no consequence at all for non-pinned data. In particular, [`mem::replace`] happily |
| /// moves `!Unpin` data, which would be immovable when pinned ([`mem::replace`] works for any |
| /// `&mut T`, not just when `T: Unpin`). |
| /// |
| /// *However*, you cannot use [`mem::replace`] on `!Unpin` data which is *pinned* by being wrapped |
| /// inside a [`Pin<Ptr>`] pointing at it. This is because you cannot (safely) use a |
| /// [`Pin<Ptr>`] to get a `&mut T` to its pointee value, which you would need to call |
| /// [`mem::replace`], and *that* is what makes this system work. |
| /// |
| /// So this, for example, can only be done on types implementing `Unpin`: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| /// use std::mem; |
| /// use std::pin::Pin; |
| /// |
| /// let mut string = "this".to_string(); |
| /// let mut pinned_string = Pin::new(&mut string); |
| /// |
| /// // We need a mutable reference to call `mem::replace`. |
| /// // We can obtain such a reference by (implicitly) invoking `Pin::deref_mut`, |
| /// // but that is only possible because `String` implements `Unpin`. |
| /// mem::replace(&mut *pinned_string, "other".to_string()); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// This trait is automatically implemented for almost every type. The compiler is free |
| /// to take the conservative stance of marking types as [`Unpin`] so long as all of the types that |
| /// compose its fields are also [`Unpin`]. This is because if a type implements [`Unpin`], then it |
| /// is unsound for that type's implementation to rely on pinning-related guarantees for soundness, |
| /// *even* when viewed through a "pinning" pointer! It is the responsibility of the implementor of |
| /// a type that relies upon pinning for soundness to ensure that type is *not* marked as [`Unpin`] |
| /// by adding [`PhantomPinned`] field. For more details, see the [`pin` module] docs. |
| /// |
| /// [`mem::replace`]: crate::mem::replace "mem replace" |
| /// [`Future`]: crate::future::Future "Future" |
| /// [`Future::poll`]: crate::future::Future::poll "Future poll" |
| /// [`Pin`]: crate::pin::Pin "Pin" |
| /// [`Pin<Ptr>`]: crate::pin::Pin "Pin" |
| /// [`pin` module]: crate::pin "pin module" |
| /// [section about `Unpin`]: crate::pin#unpin "pin module docs about unpin" |
| /// [`unsafe`]: ../../std/keyword.unsafe.html "keyword unsafe" |
| #[stable(feature = "pin", since = "1.33.0")] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented( |
| note = "consider using the `pin!` macro\nconsider using `Box::pin` if you need to access the pinned value outside of the current scope", |
| message = "`{Self}` cannot be unpinned" |
| )] |
| #[lang = "unpin"] |
| pub auto trait Unpin {} |
| |
| /// A marker type which does not implement `Unpin`. |
| /// |
| /// If a type contains a `PhantomPinned`, it will not implement `Unpin` by default. |
| // |
| // FIXME(unsafe_pinned): This is *not* a stable guarantee we want to make, at least not yet. |
| // Note that for backwards compatibility with the new [`UnsafePinned`] wrapper type, placing this |
| // marker in your struct acts as if you wrapped the entire struct in an `UnsafePinned`. This type |
| // will likely eventually be deprecated, and all new code should be using `UnsafePinned` instead. |
| #[stable(feature = "pin", since = "1.33.0")] |
| #[derive(Debug, Default, Copy, Clone, Eq, PartialEq, Ord, PartialOrd, Hash)] |
| pub struct PhantomPinned; |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "pin", since = "1.33.0")] |
| impl !Unpin for PhantomPinned {} |
| |
| // This is a small hack to allow existing code which uses PhantomPinned to opt-out of noalias to |
| // continue working. Ideally PhantomPinned could just wrap an `UnsafePinned<()>` to get the same |
| // effect, but we can't add a new field to an already stable unit struct -- that would be a breaking |
| // change. |
| impl !UnsafeUnpin for PhantomPinned {} |
| |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[stable(feature = "pin", since = "1.33.0")] |
| Unpin for |
| {T: PointeeSized} &T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} &mut T, |
| } |
| |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[stable(feature = "pin_raw", since = "1.38.0")] |
| Unpin for |
| {T: PointeeSized} *const T, |
| {T: PointeeSized} *mut T, |
| } |
| |
| /// A marker for types that can be dropped. |
| /// |
| /// This should be used for `~const` bounds, |
| /// as non-const bounds will always hold for every type. |
| #[unstable(feature = "const_destruct", issue = "133214")] |
| #[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_destruct", issue = "133214")] |
| #[lang = "destruct"] |
| #[rustc_on_unimplemented(message = "can't drop `{Self}`", append_const_msg)] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| #[const_trait] |
| pub trait Destruct {} |
| |
| /// A marker for tuple types. |
| /// |
| /// The implementation of this trait is built-in and cannot be implemented |
| /// for any user type. |
| #[unstable(feature = "tuple_trait", issue = "none")] |
| #[lang = "tuple_trait"] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented(message = "`{Self}` is not a tuple")] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| pub trait Tuple {} |
| |
| /// A marker for types which can be used as types of `const` generic parameters. |
| /// |
| /// These types must have a proper equivalence relation (`Eq`) and it must be automatically |
| /// derived (`StructuralPartialEq`). There's a hard-coded check in the compiler ensuring |
| /// that all fields are also `ConstParamTy`, which implies that recursively, all fields |
| /// are `StructuralPartialEq`. |
| #[lang = "const_param_ty"] |
| #[unstable(feature = "unsized_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented(message = "`{Self}` can't be used as a const parameter type")] |
| #[allow(multiple_supertrait_upcastable)] |
| // We name this differently than the derive macro so that the `adt_const_params` can |
| // be used independently of `unsized_const_params` without requiring a full path |
| // to the derive macro every time it is used. This should be renamed on stabilization. |
| pub trait ConstParamTy_: UnsizedConstParamTy + StructuralPartialEq + Eq {} |
| |
| /// Derive macro generating an impl of the trait `ConstParamTy`. |
| #[rustc_builtin_macro] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable(unsized_const_params)] |
| #[unstable(feature = "adt_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| pub macro ConstParamTy($item:item) { |
| /* compiler built-in */ |
| } |
| |
| #[lang = "unsized_const_param_ty"] |
| #[unstable(feature = "unsized_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented(message = "`{Self}` can't be used as a const parameter type")] |
| /// A marker for types which can be used as types of `const` generic parameters. |
| /// |
| /// Equivalent to [`ConstParamTy_`] except that this is used by |
| /// the `unsized_const_params` to allow for fake unstable impls. |
| pub trait UnsizedConstParamTy: StructuralPartialEq + Eq {} |
| |
| /// Derive macro generating an impl of the trait `ConstParamTy`. |
| #[rustc_builtin_macro] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable(unsized_const_params)] |
| #[unstable(feature = "unsized_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| pub macro UnsizedConstParamTy($item:item) { |
| /* compiler built-in */ |
| } |
| |
| // FIXME(adt_const_params): handle `ty::FnDef`/`ty::Closure` |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[unstable(feature = "adt_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| ConstParamTy_ for |
| usize, u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, |
| isize, i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, |
| bool, |
| char, |
| (), |
| {T: ConstParamTy_, const N: usize} [T; N], |
| } |
| |
| marker_impls! { |
| #[unstable(feature = "unsized_const_params", issue = "95174")] |
| UnsizedConstParamTy for |
| usize, u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, |
| isize, i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, |
| bool, |
| char, |
| (), |
| {T: UnsizedConstParamTy, const N: usize} [T; N], |
| |
| str, |
| {T: UnsizedConstParamTy} [T], |
| {T: UnsizedConstParamTy + ?Sized} &T, |
| } |
| |
| /// A common trait implemented by all function pointers. |
| // |
| // Note that while the trait is internal and unstable it is nevertheless |
| // exposed as a public bound of the stable `core::ptr::fn_addr_eq` function. |
| #[unstable( |
| feature = "fn_ptr_trait", |
| issue = "none", |
| reason = "internal trait for implementing various traits for all function pointers" |
| )] |
| #[lang = "fn_ptr_trait"] |
| #[rustc_deny_explicit_impl] |
| #[rustc_do_not_implement_via_object] |
| pub trait FnPtr: Copy + Clone { |
| /// Returns the address of the function pointer. |
| #[lang = "fn_ptr_addr"] |
| fn addr(self) -> *const (); |
| } |
| |
| /// Derive macro that makes a smart pointer usable with trait objects. |
| /// |
| /// # What this macro does |
| /// |
| /// This macro is intended to be used with user-defined pointer types, and makes it possible to |
| /// perform coercions on the pointee of the user-defined pointer. There are two aspects to this: |
| /// |
| /// ## Unsizing coercions of the pointee |
| /// |
| /// By using the macro, the following example will compile: |
| /// ``` |
| /// #![feature(derive_coerce_pointee)] |
| /// use std::marker::CoercePointee; |
| /// use std::ops::Deref; |
| /// |
| /// #[derive(CoercePointee)] |
| /// #[repr(transparent)] |
| /// struct MySmartPointer<T: ?Sized>(Box<T>); |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for MySmartPointer<T> { |
| /// type Target = T; |
| /// fn deref(&self) -> &T { |
| /// &self.0 |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// trait MyTrait {} |
| /// |
| /// impl MyTrait for i32 {} |
| /// |
| /// fn main() { |
| /// let ptr: MySmartPointer<i32> = MySmartPointer(Box::new(4)); |
| /// |
| /// // This coercion would be an error without the derive. |
| /// let ptr: MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait> = ptr; |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// Without the `#[derive(CoercePointee)]` macro, this example would fail with the following error: |
| /// ```text |
| /// error[E0308]: mismatched types |
| /// --> src/main.rs:11:44 |
| /// | |
| /// 11 | let ptr: MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait> = ptr; |
| /// | --------------------------- ^^^ expected `MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait>`, found `MySmartPointer<i32>` |
| /// | | |
| /// | expected due to this |
| /// | |
| /// = note: expected struct `MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait>` |
| /// found struct `MySmartPointer<i32>` |
| /// = help: `i32` implements `MyTrait` so you could box the found value and coerce it to the trait object `Box<dyn MyTrait>`, you will have to change the expected type as well |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ## Dyn compatibility |
| /// |
| /// This macro allows you to dispatch on the user-defined pointer type. That is, traits using the |
| /// type as a receiver are dyn-compatible. For example, this compiles: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #![feature(arbitrary_self_types, derive_coerce_pointee)] |
| /// use std::marker::CoercePointee; |
| /// use std::ops::Deref; |
| /// |
| /// #[derive(CoercePointee)] |
| /// #[repr(transparent)] |
| /// struct MySmartPointer<T: ?Sized>(Box<T>); |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for MySmartPointer<T> { |
| /// type Target = T; |
| /// fn deref(&self) -> &T { |
| /// &self.0 |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // You can always define this trait. (as long as you have #![feature(arbitrary_self_types)]) |
| /// trait MyTrait { |
| /// fn func(self: MySmartPointer<Self>); |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // But using `dyn MyTrait` requires #[derive(CoercePointee)]. |
| /// fn call_func(value: MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait>) { |
| /// value.func(); |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// If you remove the `#[derive(CoercePointee)]` annotation from the struct, then the above example |
| /// will fail with this error message: |
| /// ```text |
| /// error[E0038]: the trait `MyTrait` is not dyn compatible |
| /// --> src/lib.rs:21:36 |
| /// | |
| /// 17 | fn func(self: MySmartPointer<Self>); |
| /// | -------------------- help: consider changing method `func`'s `self` parameter to be `&self`: `&Self` |
| /// ... |
| /// 21 | fn call_func(value: MySmartPointer<dyn MyTrait>) { |
| /// | ^^^^^^^^^^^ `MyTrait` is not dyn compatible |
| /// | |
| /// note: for a trait to be dyn compatible it needs to allow building a vtable |
| /// for more information, visit <https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/traits.html#object-safety> |
| /// --> src/lib.rs:17:19 |
| /// | |
| /// 16 | trait MyTrait { |
| /// | ------- this trait is not dyn compatible... |
| /// 17 | fn func(self: MySmartPointer<Self>); |
| /// | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ...because method `func`'s `self` parameter cannot be dispatched on |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Requirements for using the macro |
| /// |
| /// This macro can only be used if: |
| /// * The type is a `#[repr(transparent)]` struct. |
| /// * The type of its non-zero-sized field must either be a standard library pointer type |
| /// (reference, raw pointer, `NonNull`, `Box`, `Rc`, `Arc`, etc.) or another user-defined type |
| /// also using the `#[derive(CoercePointee)]` macro. |
| /// * Zero-sized fields must not mention any generic parameters unless the zero-sized field has |
| /// type [`PhantomData`]. |
| /// |
| /// ## Multiple type parameters |
| /// |
| /// If the type has multiple type parameters, then you must explicitly specify which one should be |
| /// used for dynamic dispatch. For example: |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![feature(derive_coerce_pointee)] |
| /// # use std::marker::{CoercePointee, PhantomData}; |
| /// #[derive(CoercePointee)] |
| /// #[repr(transparent)] |
| /// struct MySmartPointer<#[pointee] T: ?Sized, U> { |
| /// ptr: Box<T>, |
| /// _phantom: PhantomData<U>, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// Specifying `#[pointee]` when the struct has only one type parameter is allowed, but not required. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// A custom implementation of the `Rc` type: |
| /// ``` |
| /// #![feature(derive_coerce_pointee)] |
| /// use std::marker::CoercePointee; |
| /// use std::ops::Deref; |
| /// use std::ptr::NonNull; |
| /// |
| /// #[derive(CoercePointee)] |
| /// #[repr(transparent)] |
| /// pub struct Rc<T: ?Sized> { |
| /// inner: NonNull<RcInner<T>>, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// struct RcInner<T: ?Sized> { |
| /// refcount: usize, |
| /// value: T, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for Rc<T> { |
| /// type Target = T; |
| /// fn deref(&self) -> &T { |
| /// let ptr = self.inner.as_ptr(); |
| /// unsafe { &(*ptr).value } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<T> Rc<T> { |
| /// pub fn new(value: T) -> Self { |
| /// let inner = Box::new(RcInner { |
| /// refcount: 1, |
| /// value, |
| /// }); |
| /// Self { |
| /// inner: NonNull::from(Box::leak(inner)), |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: ?Sized> Clone for Rc<T> { |
| /// fn clone(&self) -> Self { |
| /// // A real implementation would handle overflow here. |
| /// unsafe { (*self.inner.as_ptr()).refcount += 1 }; |
| /// Self { inner: self.inner } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<T: ?Sized> Drop for Rc<T> { |
| /// fn drop(&mut self) { |
| /// let ptr = self.inner.as_ptr(); |
| /// unsafe { (*ptr).refcount -= 1 }; |
| /// if unsafe { (*ptr).refcount } == 0 { |
| /// drop(unsafe { Box::from_raw(ptr) }); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| #[rustc_builtin_macro(CoercePointee, attributes(pointee))] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable(dispatch_from_dyn, coerce_unsized, unsize, coerce_pointee_validated)] |
| #[rustc_diagnostic_item = "CoercePointee"] |
| #[unstable(feature = "derive_coerce_pointee", issue = "123430")] |
| pub macro CoercePointee($item:item) { |
| /* compiler built-in */ |
| } |
| |
| /// A trait that is implemented for ADTs with `derive(CoercePointee)` so that |
| /// the compiler can enforce the derive impls are valid post-expansion, since |
| /// the derive has stricter requirements than if the impls were written by hand. |
| /// |
| /// This trait is not intended to be implemented by users or used other than |
| /// validation, so it should never be stabilized. |
| #[lang = "coerce_pointee_validated"] |
| #[unstable(feature = "coerce_pointee_validated", issue = "none")] |
| #[doc(hidden)] |
| pub trait CoercePointeeValidated { |
| /* compiler built-in */ |
| } |