| // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT |
| |
| //! Library to safely and fallibly initialize pinned `struct`s using in-place constructors. |
| //! |
| //! [Pinning][pinning] is Rust's way of ensuring data does not move. |
| //! |
| //! It also allows in-place initialization of big `struct`s that would otherwise produce a stack |
| //! overflow. |
| //! |
| //! This library's main use-case is in [Rust-for-Linux]. Although this version can be used |
| //! standalone. |
| //! |
| //! There are cases when you want to in-place initialize a struct. For example when it is very big |
| //! and moving it from the stack is not an option, because it is bigger than the stack itself. |
| //! Another reason would be that you need the address of the object to initialize it. This stands |
| //! in direct conflict with Rust's normal process of first initializing an object and then moving |
| //! it into it's final memory location. For more information, see |
| //! <https://rust-for-linux.com/the-safe-pinned-initialization-problem>. |
| //! |
| //! This library allows you to do in-place initialization safely. |
| //! |
| //! ## Nightly Needed for `alloc` feature |
| //! |
| //! This library requires the [`allocator_api` unstable feature] when the `alloc` feature is |
| //! enabled and thus this feature can only be used with a nightly compiler. When enabling the |
| //! `alloc` feature, the user will be required to activate `allocator_api` as well. |
| //! |
| //! [`allocator_api` unstable feature]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/unstable-book/library-features/allocator-api.html |
| //! |
| //! The feature is enabled by default, thus by default `pin-init` will require a nightly compiler. |
| //! However, using the crate on stable compilers is possible by disabling `alloc`. In practice this |
| //! will require the `std` feature, because stable compilers have neither `Box` nor `Arc` in no-std |
| //! mode. |
| //! |
| //! # Overview |
| //! |
| //! To initialize a `struct` with an in-place constructor you will need two things: |
| //! - an in-place constructor, |
| //! - a memory location that can hold your `struct` (this can be the [stack], an [`Arc<T>`], |
| //! [`Box<T>`] or any other smart pointer that supports this library). |
| //! |
| //! To get an in-place constructor there are generally three options: |
| //! - directly creating an in-place constructor using the [`pin_init!`] macro, |
| //! - a custom function/macro returning an in-place constructor provided by someone else, |
| //! - using the unsafe function [`pin_init_from_closure()`] to manually create an initializer. |
| //! |
| //! Aside from pinned initialization, this library also supports in-place construction without |
| //! pinning, the macros/types/functions are generally named like the pinned variants without the |
| //! `pin_` prefix. |
| //! |
| //! # Examples |
| //! |
| //! Throughout the examples we will often make use of the `CMutex` type which can be found in |
| //! `../examples/mutex.rs`. It is essentially a userland rebuild of the `struct mutex` type from |
| //! the Linux kernel. It also uses a wait list and a basic spinlock. Importantly the wait list |
| //! requires it to be pinned to be locked and thus is a prime candidate for using this library. |
| //! |
| //! ## Using the [`pin_init!`] macro |
| //! |
| //! If you want to use [`PinInit`], then you will have to annotate your `struct` with |
| //! `#[`[`pin_data`]`]`. It is a macro that uses `#[pin]` as a marker for |
| //! [structurally pinned fields]. After doing this, you can then create an in-place constructor via |
| //! [`pin_init!`]. The syntax is almost the same as normal `struct` initializers. The difference is |
| //! that you need to write `<-` instead of `:` for fields that you want to initialize in-place. |
| //! |
| //! ```rust |
| //! # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| //! # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| //! # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| //! # use core::pin::Pin; |
| //! use pin_init::{pin_data, pin_init, InPlaceInit}; |
| //! |
| //! #[pin_data] |
| //! struct Foo { |
| //! #[pin] |
| //! a: CMutex<usize>, |
| //! b: u32, |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { |
| //! a <- CMutex::new(42), |
| //! b: 24, |
| //! }); |
| //! # let _ = Box::pin_init(foo); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! `foo` now is of the type [`impl PinInit<Foo>`]. We can now use any smart pointer that we like |
| //! (or just the stack) to actually initialize a `Foo`: |
| //! |
| //! ```rust |
| //! # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| //! # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| //! # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| //! # use core::{alloc::AllocError, pin::Pin}; |
| //! # use pin_init::*; |
| //! # |
| //! # #[pin_data] |
| //! # struct Foo { |
| //! # #[pin] |
| //! # a: CMutex<usize>, |
| //! # b: u32, |
| //! # } |
| //! # |
| //! # let foo = pin_init!(Foo { |
| //! # a <- CMutex::new(42), |
| //! # b: 24, |
| //! # }); |
| //! let foo: Result<Pin<Box<Foo>>, AllocError> = Box::pin_init(foo); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! For more information see the [`pin_init!`] macro. |
| //! |
| //! ## Using a custom function/macro that returns an initializer |
| //! |
| //! Many types that use this library supply a function/macro that returns an initializer, because |
| //! the above method only works for types where you can access the fields. |
| //! |
| //! ```rust |
| //! # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| //! # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| //! # use pin_init::*; |
| //! # use std::sync::Arc; |
| //! # use core::pin::Pin; |
| //! let mtx: Result<Pin<Arc<CMutex<usize>>>, _> = Arc::pin_init(CMutex::new(42)); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! To declare an init macro/function you just return an [`impl PinInit<T, E>`]: |
| //! |
| //! ```rust |
| //! # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| //! # use pin_init::*; |
| //! # #[path = "../examples/error.rs"] mod error; use error::Error; |
| //! # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| //! #[pin_data] |
| //! struct DriverData { |
| //! #[pin] |
| //! status: CMutex<i32>, |
| //! buffer: Box<[u8; 1_000_000]>, |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! impl DriverData { |
| //! fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self, Error> { |
| //! try_pin_init!(Self { |
| //! status <- CMutex::new(0), |
| //! buffer: Box::init(pin_init::zeroed())?, |
| //! }? Error) |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ## Manual creation of an initializer |
| //! |
| //! Often when working with primitives the previous approaches are not sufficient. That is where |
| //! [`pin_init_from_closure()`] comes in. This `unsafe` function allows you to create a |
| //! [`impl PinInit<T, E>`] directly from a closure. Of course you have to ensure that the closure |
| //! actually does the initialization in the correct way. Here are the things to look out for |
| //! (we are calling the parameter to the closure `slot`): |
| //! - when the closure returns `Ok(())`, then it has completed the initialization successfully, so |
| //! `slot` now contains a valid bit pattern for the type `T`, |
| //! - when the closure returns `Err(e)`, then the caller may deallocate the memory at `slot`, so |
| //! you need to take care to clean up anything if your initialization fails mid-way, |
| //! - you may assume that `slot` will stay pinned even after the closure returns until `drop` of |
| //! `slot` gets called. |
| //! |
| //! ```rust |
| //! # #![feature(extern_types)] |
| //! use pin_init::{pin_data, pinned_drop, PinInit, PinnedDrop, pin_init_from_closure}; |
| //! use core::{ |
| //! ptr::addr_of_mut, |
| //! marker::PhantomPinned, |
| //! cell::UnsafeCell, |
| //! pin::Pin, |
| //! mem::MaybeUninit, |
| //! }; |
| //! mod bindings { |
| //! #[repr(C)] |
| //! pub struct foo { |
| //! /* fields from C ... */ |
| //! } |
| //! extern "C" { |
| //! pub fn init_foo(ptr: *mut foo); |
| //! pub fn destroy_foo(ptr: *mut foo); |
| //! #[must_use = "you must check the error return code"] |
| //! pub fn enable_foo(ptr: *mut foo, flags: u32) -> i32; |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! /// # Invariants |
| //! /// |
| //! /// `foo` is always initialized |
| //! #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)] |
| //! pub struct RawFoo { |
| //! #[pin] |
| //! _p: PhantomPinned, |
| //! #[pin] |
| //! foo: UnsafeCell<MaybeUninit<bindings::foo>>, |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! impl RawFoo { |
| //! pub fn new(flags: u32) -> impl PinInit<Self, i32> { |
| //! // SAFETY: |
| //! // - when the closure returns `Ok(())`, then it has successfully initialized and |
| //! // enabled `foo`, |
| //! // - when it returns `Err(e)`, then it has cleaned up before |
| //! unsafe { |
| //! pin_init_from_closure(move |slot: *mut Self| { |
| //! // `slot` contains uninit memory, avoid creating a reference. |
| //! let foo = addr_of_mut!((*slot).foo); |
| //! let foo = UnsafeCell::raw_get(foo).cast::<bindings::foo>(); |
| //! |
| //! // Initialize the `foo` |
| //! bindings::init_foo(foo); |
| //! |
| //! // Try to enable it. |
| //! let err = bindings::enable_foo(foo, flags); |
| //! if err != 0 { |
| //! // Enabling has failed, first clean up the foo and then return the error. |
| //! bindings::destroy_foo(foo); |
| //! Err(err) |
| //! } else { |
| //! // All fields of `RawFoo` have been initialized, since `_p` is a ZST. |
| //! Ok(()) |
| //! } |
| //! }) |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! #[pinned_drop] |
| //! impl PinnedDrop for RawFoo { |
| //! fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) { |
| //! // SAFETY: Since `foo` is initialized, destroying is safe. |
| //! unsafe { bindings::destroy_foo(self.foo.get().cast::<bindings::foo>()) }; |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! For more information on how to use [`pin_init_from_closure()`], take a look at the uses inside |
| //! the `kernel` crate. The [`sync`] module is a good starting point. |
| //! |
| //! [`sync`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/sync/index.html |
| //! [pinning]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/pin/index.html |
| //! [structurally pinned fields]: |
| //! https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/pin/index.html#pinning-is-structural-for-field |
| //! [stack]: crate::stack_pin_init |
| #![cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/sync/struct.Arc.html" |
| )] |
| #![cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Box<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/alloc/kbox/struct.Box.html" |
| )] |
| #![cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: alloc::alloc::sync::Arc")] |
| #![cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Box<T>`]: alloc::alloc::boxed::Box")] |
| //! [`impl PinInit<Foo>`]: crate::PinInit |
| //! [`impl PinInit<T, E>`]: crate::PinInit |
| //! [`impl Init<T, E>`]: crate::Init |
| //! [Rust-for-Linux]: https://rust-for-linux.com/ |
| |
| #![cfg_attr(not(RUSTC_LINT_REASONS_IS_STABLE), feature(lint_reasons))] |
| #![cfg_attr( |
| all( |
| any(feature = "alloc", feature = "std"), |
| not(RUSTC_NEW_UNINIT_IS_STABLE) |
| ), |
| feature(new_uninit) |
| )] |
| #![forbid(missing_docs, unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] |
| #![cfg_attr(not(feature = "std"), no_std)] |
| #![cfg_attr(feature = "alloc", feature(allocator_api))] |
| |
| use core::{ |
| cell::UnsafeCell, |
| convert::Infallible, |
| marker::PhantomData, |
| mem::MaybeUninit, |
| num::*, |
| pin::Pin, |
| ptr::{self, NonNull}, |
| }; |
| |
| #[doc(hidden)] |
| pub mod __internal; |
| #[doc(hidden)] |
| pub mod macros; |
| |
| #[cfg(any(feature = "std", feature = "alloc"))] |
| mod alloc; |
| #[cfg(any(feature = "std", feature = "alloc"))] |
| pub use alloc::InPlaceInit; |
| |
| /// Used to specify the pinning information of the fields of a struct. |
| /// |
| /// This is somewhat similar in purpose as |
| /// [pin-project-lite](https://crates.io/crates/pin-project-lite). |
| /// Place this macro on a struct definition and then `#[pin]` in front of the attributes of each |
| /// field you want to structurally pin. |
| /// |
| /// This macro enables the use of the [`pin_init!`] macro. When pin-initializing a `struct`, |
| /// then `#[pin]` directs the type of initializer that is required. |
| /// |
| /// If your `struct` implements `Drop`, then you need to add `PinnedDrop` as arguments to this |
| /// macro, and change your `Drop` implementation to `PinnedDrop` annotated with |
| /// `#[`[`macro@pinned_drop`]`]`, since dropping pinned values requires extra care. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// use pin_init::pin_data; |
| /// |
| /// enum Command { |
| /// /* ... */ |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct DriverData { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// queue: CMutex<Vec<Command>>, |
| /// buf: Box<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # mod bindings { pub struct info; pub unsafe fn destroy_info(_: *mut info) {} } |
| /// use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, pinned_drop, PinnedDrop}; |
| /// |
| /// enum Command { |
| /// /* ... */ |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)] |
| /// struct DriverData { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// queue: CMutex<Vec<Command>>, |
| /// buf: Box<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>, |
| /// raw_info: *mut bindings::info, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pinned_drop] |
| /// impl PinnedDrop for DriverData { |
| /// fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) { |
| /// unsafe { bindings::destroy_info(self.raw_info) }; |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| pub use ::pin_init_internal::pin_data; |
| |
| /// Used to implement `PinnedDrop` safely. |
| /// |
| /// Only works on structs that are annotated via `#[`[`macro@pin_data`]`]`. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # mod bindings { pub struct info; pub unsafe fn destroy_info(_: *mut info) {} } |
| /// use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, pinned_drop, PinnedDrop}; |
| /// |
| /// enum Command { |
| /// /* ... */ |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)] |
| /// struct DriverData { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// queue: CMutex<Vec<Command>>, |
| /// buf: Box<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>, |
| /// raw_info: *mut bindings::info, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pinned_drop] |
| /// impl PinnedDrop for DriverData { |
| /// fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) { |
| /// unsafe { bindings::destroy_info(self.raw_info) }; |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| pub use ::pin_init_internal::pinned_drop; |
| |
| /// Derives the [`Zeroable`] trait for the given struct. |
| /// |
| /// This can only be used for structs where every field implements the [`Zeroable`] trait. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use pin_init::Zeroable; |
| /// |
| /// #[derive(Zeroable)] |
| /// pub struct DriverData { |
| /// id: i64, |
| /// buf_ptr: *mut u8, |
| /// len: usize, |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| pub use ::pin_init_internal::Zeroable; |
| |
| /// Initialize and pin a type directly on the stack. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// a: CMutex<usize>, |
| /// b: Bar, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Bar { |
| /// x: u32, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// stack_pin_init!(let foo = pin_init!(Foo { |
| /// a <- CMutex::new(42), |
| /// b: Bar { |
| /// x: 64, |
| /// }, |
| /// })); |
| /// let foo: Pin<&mut Foo> = foo; |
| /// println!("a: {}", &*foo.a.lock()); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Syntax |
| /// |
| /// A normal `let` binding with optional type annotation. The expression is expected to implement |
| /// [`PinInit`]/[`Init`] with the error type [`Infallible`]. If you want to use a different error |
| /// type, then use [`stack_try_pin_init!`]. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! stack_pin_init { |
| (let $var:ident $(: $t:ty)? = $val:expr) => { |
| let val = $val; |
| let mut $var = ::core::pin::pin!($crate::__internal::StackInit$(::<$t>)?::uninit()); |
| let mut $var = match $crate::__internal::StackInit::init($var, val) { |
| Ok(res) => res, |
| Err(x) => { |
| let x: ::core::convert::Infallible = x; |
| match x {} |
| } |
| }; |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| /// Initialize and pin a type directly on the stack. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/error.rs"] mod error; use error::Error; |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// a: CMutex<usize>, |
| /// b: Box<Bar>, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// struct Bar { |
| /// x: u32, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// stack_try_pin_init!(let foo: Foo = try_pin_init!(Foo { |
| /// a <- CMutex::new(42), |
| /// b: Box::try_new(Bar { |
| /// x: 64, |
| /// })?, |
| /// }? Error)); |
| /// let foo = foo.unwrap(); |
| /// println!("a: {}", &*foo.a.lock()); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/error.rs"] mod error; use error::Error; |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// a: CMutex<usize>, |
| /// b: Box<Bar>, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// struct Bar { |
| /// x: u32, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// stack_try_pin_init!(let foo: Foo =? try_pin_init!(Foo { |
| /// a <- CMutex::new(42), |
| /// b: Box::try_new(Bar { |
| /// x: 64, |
| /// })?, |
| /// }? Error)); |
| /// println!("a: {}", &*foo.a.lock()); |
| /// # Ok::<_, Error>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Syntax |
| /// |
| /// A normal `let` binding with optional type annotation. The expression is expected to implement |
| /// [`PinInit`]/[`Init`]. This macro assigns a result to the given variable, adding a `?` after the |
| /// `=` will propagate this error. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! stack_try_pin_init { |
| (let $var:ident $(: $t:ty)? = $val:expr) => { |
| let val = $val; |
| let mut $var = ::core::pin::pin!($crate::__internal::StackInit$(::<$t>)?::uninit()); |
| let mut $var = $crate::__internal::StackInit::init($var, val); |
| }; |
| (let $var:ident $(: $t:ty)? =? $val:expr) => { |
| let val = $val; |
| let mut $var = ::core::pin::pin!($crate::__internal::StackInit$(::<$t>)?::uninit()); |
| let mut $var = $crate::__internal::StackInit::init($var, val)?; |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| /// Construct an in-place, pinned initializer for `struct`s. |
| /// |
| /// This macro defaults the error to [`Infallible`]. If you need a different error, then use |
| /// [`try_pin_init!`]. |
| /// |
| /// The syntax is almost identical to that of a normal `struct` initializer: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// a: usize, |
| /// b: Bar, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Bar { |
| /// x: u32, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// # fn demo() -> impl PinInit<Foo> { |
| /// let a = 42; |
| /// |
| /// let initializer = pin_init!(Foo { |
| /// a, |
| /// b: Bar { |
| /// x: 64, |
| /// }, |
| /// }); |
| /// # initializer } |
| /// # Box::pin_init(demo()).unwrap(); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Arbitrary Rust expressions can be used to set the value of a variable. |
| /// |
| /// The fields are initialized in the order that they appear in the initializer. So it is possible |
| /// to read already initialized fields using raw pointers. |
| /// |
| /// IMPORTANT: You are not allowed to create references to fields of the struct inside of the |
| /// initializer. |
| /// |
| /// # Init-functions |
| /// |
| /// When working with this library it is often desired to let others construct your types without |
| /// giving access to all fields. This is where you would normally write a plain function `new` that |
| /// would return a new instance of your type. With this library that is also possible. However, |
| /// there are a few extra things to keep in mind. |
| /// |
| /// To create an initializer function, simply declare it like this: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Foo { |
| /// # a: usize, |
| /// # b: Bar, |
| /// # } |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Bar { |
| /// # x: u32, |
| /// # } |
| /// impl Foo { |
| /// fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self> { |
| /// pin_init!(Self { |
| /// a: 42, |
| /// b: Bar { |
| /// x: 64, |
| /// }, |
| /// }) |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Users of `Foo` can now create it like this: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Foo { |
| /// # a: usize, |
| /// # b: Bar, |
| /// # } |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Bar { |
| /// # x: u32, |
| /// # } |
| /// # impl Foo { |
| /// # fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self> { |
| /// # pin_init!(Self { |
| /// # a: 42, |
| /// # b: Bar { |
| /// # x: 64, |
| /// # }, |
| /// # }) |
| /// # } |
| /// # } |
| /// let foo = Box::pin_init(Foo::new()); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// They can also easily embed it into their own `struct`s: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Foo { |
| /// # a: usize, |
| /// # b: Bar, |
| /// # } |
| /// # #[pin_data] |
| /// # struct Bar { |
| /// # x: u32, |
| /// # } |
| /// # impl Foo { |
| /// # fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self> { |
| /// # pin_init!(Self { |
| /// # a: 42, |
| /// # b: Bar { |
| /// # x: 64, |
| /// # }, |
| /// # }) |
| /// # } |
| /// # } |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct FooContainer { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// foo1: Foo, |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// foo2: Foo, |
| /// other: u32, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl FooContainer { |
| /// fn new(other: u32) -> impl PinInit<Self> { |
| /// pin_init!(Self { |
| /// foo1 <- Foo::new(), |
| /// foo2 <- Foo::new(), |
| /// other, |
| /// }) |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Here we see that when using `pin_init!` with `PinInit`, one needs to write `<-` instead of `:`. |
| /// This signifies that the given field is initialized in-place. As with `struct` initializers, just |
| /// writing the field (in this case `other`) without `:` or `<-` means `other: other,`. |
| /// |
| /// # Syntax |
| /// |
| /// As already mentioned in the examples above, inside of `pin_init!` a `struct` initializer with |
| /// the following modifications is expected: |
| /// - Fields that you want to initialize in-place have to use `<-` instead of `:`. |
| /// - In front of the initializer you can write `&this in` to have access to a [`NonNull<Self>`] |
| /// pointer named `this` inside of the initializer. |
| /// - Using struct update syntax one can place `..Zeroable::zeroed()` at the very end of the |
| /// struct, this initializes every field with 0 and then runs all initializers specified in the |
| /// body. This can only be done if [`Zeroable`] is implemented for the struct. |
| /// |
| /// For instance: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::{ptr::addr_of_mut, marker::PhantomPinned}; |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// #[derive(Zeroable)] |
| /// struct Buf { |
| /// // `ptr` points into `buf`. |
| /// ptr: *mut u8, |
| /// buf: [u8; 64], |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// pin: PhantomPinned, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// let init = pin_init!(&this in Buf { |
| /// buf: [0; 64], |
| /// // SAFETY: TODO. |
| /// ptr: unsafe { addr_of_mut!((*this.as_ptr()).buf).cast() }, |
| /// pin: PhantomPinned, |
| /// }); |
| /// let init = pin_init!(Buf { |
| /// buf: [1; 64], |
| /// ..Zeroable::zeroed() |
| /// }); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// [`NonNull<Self>`]: core::ptr::NonNull |
| // For a detailed example of how this macro works, see the module documentation of the hidden |
| // module `macros` inside of `macros.rs`. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! pin_init { |
| ($(&$this:ident in)? $t:ident $(::<$($generics:ty),* $(,)?>)? { |
| $($fields:tt)* |
| }) => { |
| $crate::try_pin_init!($(&$this in)? $t $(::<$($generics),*>)? { |
| $($fields)* |
| }? ::core::convert::Infallible) |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| /// Construct an in-place, fallible pinned initializer for `struct`s. |
| /// |
| /// If the initialization can complete without error (or [`Infallible`]), then use [`pin_init!`]. |
| /// |
| /// You can use the `?` operator or use `return Err(err)` inside the initializer to stop |
| /// initialization and return the error. |
| /// |
| /// IMPORTANT: if you have `unsafe` code inside of the initializer you have to ensure that when |
| /// initialization fails, the memory can be safely deallocated without any further modifications. |
| /// |
| /// The syntax is identical to [`pin_init!`] with the following exception: you must append `? $type` |
| /// after the `struct` initializer to specify the error type you want to use. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/error.rs"] mod error; use error::Error; |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, try_pin_init, PinInit, InPlaceInit, zeroed}; |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct BigBuf { |
| /// big: Box<[u8; 1024 * 1024 * 1024]>, |
| /// small: [u8; 1024 * 1024], |
| /// ptr: *mut u8, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl BigBuf { |
| /// fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self, Error> { |
| /// try_pin_init!(Self { |
| /// big: Box::init(zeroed())?, |
| /// small: [0; 1024 * 1024], |
| /// ptr: core::ptr::null_mut(), |
| /// }? Error) |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// # let _ = Box::pin_init(BigBuf::new()); |
| /// ``` |
| // For a detailed example of how this macro works, see the module documentation of the hidden |
| // module `macros` inside of `macros.rs`. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! try_pin_init { |
| ($(&$this:ident in)? $t:ident $(::<$($generics:ty),* $(,)?>)? { |
| $($fields:tt)* |
| }? $err:ty) => { |
| $crate::__init_internal!( |
| @this($($this)?), |
| @typ($t $(::<$($generics),*>)? ), |
| @fields($($fields)*), |
| @error($err), |
| @data(PinData, use_data), |
| @has_data(HasPinData, __pin_data), |
| @construct_closure(pin_init_from_closure), |
| @munch_fields($($fields)*), |
| ) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Construct an in-place initializer for `struct`s. |
| /// |
| /// This macro defaults the error to [`Infallible`]. If you need a different error, then use |
| /// [`try_init!`]. |
| /// |
| /// The syntax is identical to [`pin_init!`] and its safety caveats also apply: |
| /// - `unsafe` code must guarantee either full initialization or return an error and allow |
| /// deallocation of the memory. |
| /// - the fields are initialized in the order given in the initializer. |
| /// - no references to fields are allowed to be created inside of the initializer. |
| /// |
| /// This initializer is for initializing data in-place that might later be moved. If you want to |
| /// pin-initialize, use [`pin_init!`]. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/error.rs"] mod error; use error::Error; |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::InPlaceInit; |
| /// use pin_init::{init, Init, zeroed}; |
| /// |
| /// struct BigBuf { |
| /// small: [u8; 1024 * 1024], |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl BigBuf { |
| /// fn new() -> impl Init<Self> { |
| /// init!(Self { |
| /// small <- zeroed(), |
| /// }) |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// # let _ = Box::init(BigBuf::new()); |
| /// ``` |
| // For a detailed example of how this macro works, see the module documentation of the hidden |
| // module `macros` inside of `macros.rs`. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! init { |
| ($(&$this:ident in)? $t:ident $(::<$($generics:ty),* $(,)?>)? { |
| $($fields:tt)* |
| }) => { |
| $crate::try_init!($(&$this in)? $t $(::<$($generics),*>)? { |
| $($fields)* |
| }? ::core::convert::Infallible) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Construct an in-place fallible initializer for `struct`s. |
| /// |
| /// If the initialization can complete without error (or [`Infallible`]), then use |
| /// [`init!`]. |
| /// |
| /// The syntax is identical to [`try_pin_init!`]. You need to specify a custom error |
| /// via `? $type` after the `struct` initializer. |
| /// The safety caveats from [`try_pin_init!`] also apply: |
| /// - `unsafe` code must guarantee either full initialization or return an error and allow |
| /// deallocation of the memory. |
| /// - the fields are initialized in the order given in the initializer. |
| /// - no references to fields are allowed to be created inside of the initializer. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # use core::alloc::AllocError; |
| /// # use pin_init::InPlaceInit; |
| /// use pin_init::{try_init, Init, zeroed}; |
| /// |
| /// struct BigBuf { |
| /// big: Box<[u8; 1024 * 1024 * 1024]>, |
| /// small: [u8; 1024 * 1024], |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl BigBuf { |
| /// fn new() -> impl Init<Self, AllocError> { |
| /// try_init!(Self { |
| /// big: Box::init(zeroed())?, |
| /// small: [0; 1024 * 1024], |
| /// }? AllocError) |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// # let _ = Box::init(BigBuf::new()); |
| /// ``` |
| // For a detailed example of how this macro works, see the module documentation of the hidden |
| // module `macros` inside of `macros.rs`. |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! try_init { |
| ($(&$this:ident in)? $t:ident $(::<$($generics:ty),* $(,)?>)? { |
| $($fields:tt)* |
| }? $err:ty) => { |
| $crate::__init_internal!( |
| @this($($this)?), |
| @typ($t $(::<$($generics),*>)?), |
| @fields($($fields)*), |
| @error($err), |
| @data(InitData, /*no use_data*/), |
| @has_data(HasInitData, __init_data), |
| @construct_closure(init_from_closure), |
| @munch_fields($($fields)*), |
| ) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Asserts that a field on a struct using `#[pin_data]` is marked with `#[pin]` ie. that it is |
| /// structurally pinned. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This will succeed: |
| /// ``` |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, assert_pinned}; |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct MyStruct { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// some_field: u64, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// assert_pinned!(MyStruct, some_field, u64); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// This will fail: |
| /// ```compile_fail |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, assert_pinned}; |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct MyStruct { |
| /// some_field: u64, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// assert_pinned!(MyStruct, some_field, u64); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Some uses of the macro may trigger the `can't use generic parameters from outer item` error. To |
| /// work around this, you may pass the `inline` parameter to the macro. The `inline` parameter can |
| /// only be used when the macro is invoked from a function body. |
| /// ``` |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// use pin_init::{pin_data, assert_pinned}; |
| /// |
| /// #[pin_data] |
| /// struct Foo<T> { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// elem: T, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl<T> Foo<T> { |
| /// fn project(self: Pin<&mut Self>) -> Pin<&mut T> { |
| /// assert_pinned!(Foo<T>, elem, T, inline); |
| /// |
| /// // SAFETY: The field is structurally pinned. |
| /// unsafe { self.map_unchecked_mut(|me| &mut me.elem) } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| macro_rules! assert_pinned { |
| ($ty:ty, $field:ident, $field_ty:ty, inline) => { |
| let _ = move |ptr: *mut $field_ty| { |
| // SAFETY: This code is unreachable. |
| let data = unsafe { <$ty as $crate::__internal::HasPinData>::__pin_data() }; |
| let init = $crate::__internal::AlwaysFail::<$field_ty>::new(); |
| // SAFETY: This code is unreachable. |
| unsafe { data.$field(ptr, init) }.ok(); |
| }; |
| }; |
| |
| ($ty:ty, $field:ident, $field_ty:ty) => { |
| const _: () = { |
| $crate::assert_pinned!($ty, $field, $field_ty, inline); |
| }; |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| /// A pin-initializer for the type `T`. |
| /// |
| /// To use this initializer, you will need a suitable memory location that can hold a `T`. This can |
| /// be [`Box<T>`], [`Arc<T>`] or even the stack (see [`stack_pin_init!`]). |
| /// |
| /// Also see the [module description](self). |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// When implementing this trait you will need to take great care. Also there are probably very few |
| /// cases where a manual implementation is necessary. Use [`pin_init_from_closure`] where possible. |
| /// |
| /// The [`PinInit::__pinned_init`] function: |
| /// - returns `Ok(())` if it initialized every field of `slot`, |
| /// - returns `Err(err)` if it encountered an error and then cleaned `slot`, this means: |
| /// - `slot` can be deallocated without UB occurring, |
| /// - `slot` does not need to be dropped, |
| /// - `slot` is not partially initialized. |
| /// - while constructing the `T` at `slot` it upholds the pinning invariants of `T`. |
| /// |
| #[cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/sync/struct.Arc.html" |
| )] |
| #[cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Box<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/alloc/kbox/struct.Box.html" |
| )] |
| #[cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: alloc::alloc::sync::Arc")] |
| #[cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Box<T>`]: alloc::alloc::boxed::Box")] |
| #[must_use = "An initializer must be used in order to create its value."] |
| pub unsafe trait PinInit<T: ?Sized, E = Infallible>: Sized { |
| /// Initializes `slot`. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// - `slot` is a valid pointer to uninitialized memory. |
| /// - the caller does not touch `slot` when `Err` is returned, they are only permitted to |
| /// deallocate. |
| /// - `slot` will not move until it is dropped, i.e. it will be pinned. |
| unsafe fn __pinned_init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E>; |
| |
| /// First initializes the value using `self` then calls the function `f` with the initialized |
| /// value. |
| /// |
| /// If `f` returns an error the value is dropped and the initializer will forward the error. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// let mtx_init = CMutex::new(42); |
| /// // Make the initializer print the value. |
| /// let mtx_init = mtx_init.pin_chain(|mtx| { |
| /// println!("{:?}", mtx.get_data_mut()); |
| /// Ok(()) |
| /// }); |
| /// ``` |
| fn pin_chain<F>(self, f: F) -> ChainPinInit<Self, F, T, E> |
| where |
| F: FnOnce(Pin<&mut T>) -> Result<(), E>, |
| { |
| ChainPinInit(self, f, PhantomData) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// An initializer returned by [`PinInit::pin_chain`]. |
| pub struct ChainPinInit<I, F, T: ?Sized, E>(I, F, __internal::Invariant<(E, T)>); |
| |
| // SAFETY: The `__pinned_init` function is implemented such that it |
| // - returns `Ok(())` on successful initialization, |
| // - returns `Err(err)` on error and in this case `slot` will be dropped. |
| // - considers `slot` pinned. |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, E, I, F> PinInit<T, E> for ChainPinInit<I, F, T, E> |
| where |
| I: PinInit<T, E>, |
| F: FnOnce(Pin<&mut T>) -> Result<(), E>, |
| { |
| unsafe fn __pinned_init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E> { |
| // SAFETY: All requirements fulfilled since this function is `__pinned_init`. |
| unsafe { self.0.__pinned_init(slot)? }; |
| // SAFETY: The above call initialized `slot` and we still have unique access. |
| let val = unsafe { &mut *slot }; |
| // SAFETY: `slot` is considered pinned. |
| let val = unsafe { Pin::new_unchecked(val) }; |
| // SAFETY: `slot` was initialized above. |
| (self.1)(val).inspect_err(|_| unsafe { core::ptr::drop_in_place(slot) }) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// An initializer for `T`. |
| /// |
| /// To use this initializer, you will need a suitable memory location that can hold a `T`. This can |
| /// be [`Box<T>`], [`Arc<T>`] or even the stack (see [`stack_pin_init!`]). Because |
| /// [`PinInit<T, E>`] is a super trait, you can use every function that takes it as well. |
| /// |
| /// Also see the [module description](self). |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// When implementing this trait you will need to take great care. Also there are probably very few |
| /// cases where a manual implementation is necessary. Use [`init_from_closure`] where possible. |
| /// |
| /// The [`Init::__init`] function: |
| /// - returns `Ok(())` if it initialized every field of `slot`, |
| /// - returns `Err(err)` if it encountered an error and then cleaned `slot`, this means: |
| /// - `slot` can be deallocated without UB occurring, |
| /// - `slot` does not need to be dropped, |
| /// - `slot` is not partially initialized. |
| /// - while constructing the `T` at `slot` it upholds the pinning invariants of `T`. |
| /// |
| /// The `__pinned_init` function from the supertrait [`PinInit`] needs to execute the exact same |
| /// code as `__init`. |
| /// |
| /// Contrary to its supertype [`PinInit<T, E>`] the caller is allowed to |
| /// move the pointee after initialization. |
| /// |
| #[cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/sync/struct.Arc.html" |
| )] |
| #[cfg_attr( |
| kernel, |
| doc = "[`Box<T>`]: https://rust.docs.kernel.org/kernel/alloc/kbox/struct.Box.html" |
| )] |
| #[cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Arc<T>`]: alloc::alloc::sync::Arc")] |
| #[cfg_attr(not(kernel), doc = "[`Box<T>`]: alloc::alloc::boxed::Box")] |
| #[must_use = "An initializer must be used in order to create its value."] |
| pub unsafe trait Init<T: ?Sized, E = Infallible>: PinInit<T, E> { |
| /// Initializes `slot`. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// - `slot` is a valid pointer to uninitialized memory. |
| /// - the caller does not touch `slot` when `Err` is returned, they are only permitted to |
| /// deallocate. |
| unsafe fn __init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E>; |
| |
| /// First initializes the value using `self` then calls the function `f` with the initialized |
| /// value. |
| /// |
| /// If `f` returns an error the value is dropped and the initializer will forward the error. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![expect(clippy::disallowed_names)] |
| /// use pin_init::{init, zeroed, Init}; |
| /// |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// buf: [u8; 1_000_000], |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// impl Foo { |
| /// fn setup(&mut self) { |
| /// println!("Setting up foo"); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// let foo = init!(Foo { |
| /// buf <- zeroed() |
| /// }).chain(|foo| { |
| /// foo.setup(); |
| /// Ok(()) |
| /// }); |
| /// ``` |
| fn chain<F>(self, f: F) -> ChainInit<Self, F, T, E> |
| where |
| F: FnOnce(&mut T) -> Result<(), E>, |
| { |
| ChainInit(self, f, PhantomData) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// An initializer returned by [`Init::chain`]. |
| pub struct ChainInit<I, F, T: ?Sized, E>(I, F, __internal::Invariant<(E, T)>); |
| |
| // SAFETY: The `__init` function is implemented such that it |
| // - returns `Ok(())` on successful initialization, |
| // - returns `Err(err)` on error and in this case `slot` will be dropped. |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, E, I, F> Init<T, E> for ChainInit<I, F, T, E> |
| where |
| I: Init<T, E>, |
| F: FnOnce(&mut T) -> Result<(), E>, |
| { |
| unsafe fn __init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E> { |
| // SAFETY: All requirements fulfilled since this function is `__init`. |
| unsafe { self.0.__pinned_init(slot)? }; |
| // SAFETY: The above call initialized `slot` and we still have unique access. |
| (self.1)(unsafe { &mut *slot }).inspect_err(|_| |
| // SAFETY: `slot` was initialized above. |
| unsafe { core::ptr::drop_in_place(slot) }) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // SAFETY: `__pinned_init` behaves exactly the same as `__init`. |
| unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, E, I, F> PinInit<T, E> for ChainInit<I, F, T, E> |
| where |
| I: Init<T, E>, |
| F: FnOnce(&mut T) -> Result<(), E>, |
| { |
| unsafe fn __pinned_init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E> { |
| // SAFETY: `__init` has less strict requirements compared to `__pinned_init`. |
| unsafe { self.__init(slot) } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Creates a new [`PinInit<T, E>`] from the given closure. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// The closure: |
| /// - returns `Ok(())` if it initialized every field of `slot`, |
| /// - returns `Err(err)` if it encountered an error and then cleaned `slot`, this means: |
| /// - `slot` can be deallocated without UB occurring, |
| /// - `slot` does not need to be dropped, |
| /// - `slot` is not partially initialized. |
| /// - may assume that the `slot` does not move if `T: !Unpin`, |
| /// - while constructing the `T` at `slot` it upholds the pinning invariants of `T`. |
| #[inline] |
| pub const unsafe fn pin_init_from_closure<T: ?Sized, E>( |
| f: impl FnOnce(*mut T) -> Result<(), E>, |
| ) -> impl PinInit<T, E> { |
| __internal::InitClosure(f, PhantomData) |
| } |
| |
| /// Creates a new [`Init<T, E>`] from the given closure. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// The closure: |
| /// - returns `Ok(())` if it initialized every field of `slot`, |
| /// - returns `Err(err)` if it encountered an error and then cleaned `slot`, this means: |
| /// - `slot` can be deallocated without UB occurring, |
| /// - `slot` does not need to be dropped, |
| /// - `slot` is not partially initialized. |
| /// - the `slot` may move after initialization. |
| /// - while constructing the `T` at `slot` it upholds the pinning invariants of `T`. |
| #[inline] |
| pub const unsafe fn init_from_closure<T: ?Sized, E>( |
| f: impl FnOnce(*mut T) -> Result<(), E>, |
| ) -> impl Init<T, E> { |
| __internal::InitClosure(f, PhantomData) |
| } |
| |
| /// An initializer that leaves the memory uninitialized. |
| /// |
| /// The initializer is a no-op. The `slot` memory is not changed. |
| #[inline] |
| pub fn uninit<T, E>() -> impl Init<MaybeUninit<T>, E> { |
| // SAFETY: The memory is allowed to be uninitialized. |
| unsafe { init_from_closure(|_| Ok(())) } |
| } |
| |
| /// Initializes an array by initializing each element via the provided initializer. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// use pin_init::init_array_from_fn; |
| /// let array: Box<[usize; 1_000]> = Box::init(init_array_from_fn(|i| i)).unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(array.len(), 1_000); |
| /// ``` |
| pub fn init_array_from_fn<I, const N: usize, T, E>( |
| mut make_init: impl FnMut(usize) -> I, |
| ) -> impl Init<[T; N], E> |
| where |
| I: Init<T, E>, |
| { |
| let init = move |slot: *mut [T; N]| { |
| let slot = slot.cast::<T>(); |
| for i in 0..N { |
| let init = make_init(i); |
| // SAFETY: Since 0 <= `i` < N, it is still in bounds of `[T; N]`. |
| let ptr = unsafe { slot.add(i) }; |
| // SAFETY: The pointer is derived from `slot` and thus satisfies the `__init` |
| // requirements. |
| if let Err(e) = unsafe { init.__init(ptr) } { |
| // SAFETY: The loop has initialized the elements `slot[0..i]` and since we return |
| // `Err` below, `slot` will be considered uninitialized memory. |
| unsafe { ptr::drop_in_place(ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(slot, i)) }; |
| return Err(e); |
| } |
| } |
| Ok(()) |
| }; |
| // SAFETY: The initializer above initializes every element of the array. On failure it drops |
| // any initialized elements and returns `Err`. |
| unsafe { init_from_closure(init) } |
| } |
| |
| /// Initializes an array by initializing each element via the provided initializer. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// # use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// use pin_init::pin_init_array_from_fn; |
| /// use std::sync::Arc; |
| /// let array: Pin<Arc<[CMutex<usize>; 1_000]>> = |
| /// Arc::pin_init(pin_init_array_from_fn(|i| CMutex::new(i))).unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(array.len(), 1_000); |
| /// ``` |
| pub fn pin_init_array_from_fn<I, const N: usize, T, E>( |
| mut make_init: impl FnMut(usize) -> I, |
| ) -> impl PinInit<[T; N], E> |
| where |
| I: PinInit<T, E>, |
| { |
| let init = move |slot: *mut [T; N]| { |
| let slot = slot.cast::<T>(); |
| for i in 0..N { |
| let init = make_init(i); |
| // SAFETY: Since 0 <= `i` < N, it is still in bounds of `[T; N]`. |
| let ptr = unsafe { slot.add(i) }; |
| // SAFETY: The pointer is derived from `slot` and thus satisfies the `__init` |
| // requirements. |
| if let Err(e) = unsafe { init.__pinned_init(ptr) } { |
| // SAFETY: The loop has initialized the elements `slot[0..i]` and since we return |
| // `Err` below, `slot` will be considered uninitialized memory. |
| unsafe { ptr::drop_in_place(ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(slot, i)) }; |
| return Err(e); |
| } |
| } |
| Ok(()) |
| }; |
| // SAFETY: The initializer above initializes every element of the array. On failure it drops |
| // any initialized elements and returns `Err`. |
| unsafe { pin_init_from_closure(init) } |
| } |
| |
| // SAFETY: Every type can be initialized by-value. |
| unsafe impl<T, E> Init<T, E> for T { |
| unsafe fn __init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E> { |
| // SAFETY: TODO. |
| unsafe { slot.write(self) }; |
| Ok(()) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // SAFETY: Every type can be initialized by-value. `__pinned_init` calls `__init`. |
| unsafe impl<T, E> PinInit<T, E> for T { |
| unsafe fn __pinned_init(self, slot: *mut T) -> Result<(), E> { |
| // SAFETY: TODO. |
| unsafe { self.__init(slot) } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Smart pointer containing uninitialized memory and that can write a value. |
| pub trait InPlaceWrite<T> { |
| /// The type `Self` turns into when the contents are initialized. |
| type Initialized; |
| |
| /// Use the given initializer to write a value into `self`. |
| /// |
| /// Does not drop the current value and considers it as uninitialized memory. |
| fn write_init<E>(self, init: impl Init<T, E>) -> Result<Self::Initialized, E>; |
| |
| /// Use the given pin-initializer to write a value into `self`. |
| /// |
| /// Does not drop the current value and considers it as uninitialized memory. |
| fn write_pin_init<E>(self, init: impl PinInit<T, E>) -> Result<Pin<Self::Initialized>, E>; |
| } |
| |
| /// Trait facilitating pinned destruction. |
| /// |
| /// Use [`pinned_drop`] to implement this trait safely: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// # #![feature(allocator_api)] |
| /// # #[path = "../examples/mutex.rs"] mod mutex; use mutex::*; |
| /// # use pin_init::*; |
| /// use core::pin::Pin; |
| /// #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)] |
| /// struct Foo { |
| /// #[pin] |
| /// mtx: CMutex<usize>, |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// #[pinned_drop] |
| /// impl PinnedDrop for Foo { |
| /// fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) { |
| /// println!("Foo is being dropped!"); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// This trait must be implemented via the [`pinned_drop`] proc-macro attribute on the impl. |
| pub unsafe trait PinnedDrop: __internal::HasPinData { |
| /// Executes the pinned destructor of this type. |
| /// |
| /// While this function is marked safe, it is actually unsafe to call it manually. For this |
| /// reason it takes an additional parameter. This type can only be constructed by `unsafe` code |
| /// and thus prevents this function from being called where it should not. |
| /// |
| /// This extra parameter will be generated by the `#[pinned_drop]` proc-macro attribute |
| /// automatically. |
| fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>, only_call_from_drop: __internal::OnlyCallFromDrop); |
| } |
| |
| /// Marker trait for types that can be initialized by writing just zeroes. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// The bit pattern consisting of only zeroes is a valid bit pattern for this type. In other words, |
| /// this is not UB: |
| /// |
| /// ```rust,ignore |
| /// let val: Self = unsafe { core::mem::zeroed() }; |
| /// ``` |
| pub unsafe trait Zeroable {} |
| |
| /// Marker trait for types that allow `Option<Self>` to be set to all zeroes in order to write |
| /// `None` to that location. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// The implementer needs to ensure that `unsafe impl Zeroable for Option<Self> {}` is sound. |
| pub unsafe trait ZeroableOption {} |
| |
| // SAFETY: by the safety requirement of `ZeroableOption`, this is valid. |
| unsafe impl<T: ZeroableOption> Zeroable for Option<T> {} |
| |
| /// Create a new zeroed T. |
| /// |
| /// The returned initializer will write `0x00` to every byte of the given `slot`. |
| #[inline] |
| pub fn zeroed<T: Zeroable>() -> impl Init<T> { |
| // SAFETY: Because `T: Zeroable`, all bytes zero is a valid bit pattern for `T` |
| // and because we write all zeroes, the memory is initialized. |
| unsafe { |
| init_from_closure(|slot: *mut T| { |
| slot.write_bytes(0, 1); |
| Ok(()) |
| }) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| macro_rules! impl_zeroable { |
| ($($({$($generics:tt)*})? $t:ty, )*) => { |
| // SAFETY: Safety comments written in the macro invocation. |
| $(unsafe impl$($($generics)*)? Zeroable for $t {})* |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| impl_zeroable! { |
| // SAFETY: All primitives that are allowed to be zero. |
| bool, |
| char, |
| u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, usize, |
| i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, isize, |
| f32, f64, |
| |
| // Note: do not add uninhabited types (such as `!` or `core::convert::Infallible`) to this list; |
| // creating an instance of an uninhabited type is immediate undefined behavior. For more on |
| // uninhabited/empty types, consult The Rustonomicon: |
| // <https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/nomicon/exotic-sizes.html#empty-types>. The Rust Reference |
| // also has information on undefined behavior: |
| // <https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/reference/behavior-considered-undefined.html>. |
| // |
| // SAFETY: These are inhabited ZSTs; there is nothing to zero and a valid value exists. |
| {<T: ?Sized>} PhantomData<T>, core::marker::PhantomPinned, (), |
| |
| // SAFETY: Type is allowed to take any value, including all zeros. |
| {<T>} MaybeUninit<T>, |
| |
| // SAFETY: `T: Zeroable` and `UnsafeCell` is `repr(transparent)`. |
| {<T: ?Sized + Zeroable>} UnsafeCell<T>, |
| |
| // SAFETY: All zeros is equivalent to `None` (option layout optimization guarantee: |
| // https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/option/index.html#representation). |
| Option<NonZeroU8>, Option<NonZeroU16>, Option<NonZeroU32>, Option<NonZeroU64>, |
| Option<NonZeroU128>, Option<NonZeroUsize>, |
| Option<NonZeroI8>, Option<NonZeroI16>, Option<NonZeroI32>, Option<NonZeroI64>, |
| Option<NonZeroI128>, Option<NonZeroIsize>, |
| {<T>} Option<NonNull<T>>, |
| |
| // SAFETY: `null` pointer is valid. |
| // |
| // We cannot use `T: ?Sized`, since the VTABLE pointer part of fat pointers is not allowed to be |
| // null. |
| // |
| // When `Pointee` gets stabilized, we could use |
| // `T: ?Sized where <T as Pointee>::Metadata: Zeroable` |
| {<T>} *mut T, {<T>} *const T, |
| |
| // SAFETY: `null` pointer is valid and the metadata part of these fat pointers is allowed to be |
| // zero. |
| {<T>} *mut [T], {<T>} *const [T], *mut str, *const str, |
| |
| // SAFETY: `T` is `Zeroable`. |
| {<const N: usize, T: Zeroable>} [T; N], {<T: Zeroable>} Wrapping<T>, |
| } |
| |
| macro_rules! impl_tuple_zeroable { |
| ($(,)?) => {}; |
| ($first:ident, $($t:ident),* $(,)?) => { |
| // SAFETY: All elements are zeroable and padding can be zero. |
| unsafe impl<$first: Zeroable, $($t: Zeroable),*> Zeroable for ($first, $($t),*) {} |
| impl_tuple_zeroable!($($t),* ,); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| impl_tuple_zeroable!(A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J); |