refactor null a bit

pull/158/head
Ralf Jung 5 years ago committed by Alexis Beingessner
parent 6596772610
commit 98a71fde9f

@ -16,8 +16,8 @@ to your program. You definitely *should not* invoke Undefined Behavior.
Unlike C, Undefined Behavior is pretty limited in scope in Rust. All the core
language cares about is preventing the following things:
* Dereferencing (using the `*` operator on) null, dangling, or unaligned
pointers, or wide pointers with invalid metadata (see below)
* Dereferencing (using the `*` operator on) dangling, or unaligned pointers, or
wide pointers with invalid metadata (see below)
* Reading [uninitialized memory][]
* Breaking the [pointer aliasing rules][]
* Unwinding into another language
@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ language cares about is preventing the following things:
* null `fn` pointers
* a `char` outside the ranges [0x0, 0xD7FF] and [0xE000, 0x10FFFF]
* a `!` (all values are invalid for this type)
* dangling/null/unaligned references, references that do themselves point to
* dangling/unaligned references, references that do themselves point to
invalid values, or wide references (to a dynamically sized type) with
invalid metadata
* slice metadata is invalid if the slice has a total size larger than
@ -48,8 +48,9 @@ language cares about is preventing the following things:
function/primitive operation or returned from a function/primitive operation.
A reference/pointer is "dangling" if not all of the bytes it points to are part
of the same allocation. The span of bytes it points to is determined by the
pointer value and the size of the pointee type.
of the same allocation. In particular, null pointers are dangling. The span of bytes it
points to is determined by the pointer value and the size of the pointee type.
If the span is empty, "dangling" is the same as "non-null".
That's it. That's all the causes of Undefined Behavior baked into Rust. Of
course, unsafe functions and traits are free to declare arbitrary other

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