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nomicon/other-reprs.md

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% Alternative representations
Rust allows you to specify alternative data layout strategies from the default.
# repr(C)
This is the most important `repr`. It has fairly simple intent: do what C does.
The order, size, and alignment of fields is exactly what you would expect from C
or C++. Any type you expect to pass through an FFI boundary should have
`repr(C)`, as C is the lingua-franca of the programming world. This is also
necessary to soundly do more elaborate tricks with data layout such as
reintepretting values as a different type.
However, the interaction with Rust's more exotic data layout features must be
kept in mind. Due to its dual purpose as "for FFI" and "for layout control",
`repr(C)` can be applied to types that will be nonsensical or problematic if
passed through the FFI boundary.
* ZSTs are still zero-sized, even though this is not a standard behaviour in
C, and is explicitly contrary to the behaviour of an empty type in C++, which
still consumes a byte of space.
* DSTs, tuples, and tagged unions are not a concept in C and as such are never
FFI safe.
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* **The [drop flag][] will still be added**
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* This is equivalent to one of `repr(u*)` (see the next section) for enums. The
chosen size is the default enum size for the target platform's C ABI. Note that
enum representation in C is implementation defined, so this is really a "best
guess". In particular, this may be incorrect when the C code of interest is
compiled with certain flags.
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# repr(u8), repr(u16), repr(u32), repr(u64)
These specify the size to make a C-like enum. If the discriminant overflows the
integer it has to fit in, it will be an error. You can manually ask Rust to
allow this by setting the overflowing element to explicitly be 0. However Rust
will not allow you to create an enum where two variants have the same
discriminant.
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On non-C-like enums, this will inhibit certain optimizations like the null-
pointer optimization.
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These reprs have no affect on a struct.
# repr(packed)
`repr(packed)` forces rust to strip any padding, and only align the type to a
byte. This may improve the memory footprint, but will likely have other negative
side-effects.
In particular, most architectures *strongly* prefer values to be aligned. This
may mean the unaligned loads are penalized (x86), or even fault (some ARM
chips). For simple cases like directly loading or storing a packed field, the
compiler might be able to paper over alignment issues with shifts and masks.
However if you take a reference to a packed field, it's unlikely that the
compiler will be able to emit code to avoid an unaligned load.
`repr(packed)` is not to be used lightly. Unless you have extreme requirements,
this should not be used.
This repr is a modifier on `repr(C)` and `repr(rust)`.
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[drop flag]: drop-flags.html