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62 lines
2.2 KiB
62 lines
2.2 KiB
% Layout
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First off, we need to come up with the struct layout. Naively we want this
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design:
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```rust
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struct Vec<T> {
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ptr: *mut T,
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cap: usize,
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len: usize,
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}
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```
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And indeed this would compile. Unfortunately, it would be incorrect. The compiler
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will give us too strict variance, so e.g. an `&Vec<&'static str>` couldn't be used
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where an `&Vec<&'a str>` was expected. More importantly, it will give incorrect
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ownership information to dropck, as it will conservatively assume we don't own
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any values of type `T`. See [the chapter on ownership and lifetimes]
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(lifetimes.html) for details.
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As we saw in the lifetimes chapter, we should use `Unique<T>` in place of `*mut T`
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when we have a raw pointer to an allocation we own:
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```rust
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#![feature(unique)]
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use std::ptr::{Unique, self};
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pub struct Vec<T> {
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ptr: Unique<T>,
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cap: usize,
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len: usize,
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}
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```
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As a recap, Unique is a wrapper around a raw pointer that declares that:
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* We own at least one value of type `T`
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* We are Send/Sync iff `T` is Send/Sync
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* Our pointer is never null (and therefore `Option<Vec>` is null-pointer-optimized)
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That last point is subtle. First, it makes `Unique::new` unsafe to call, because
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putting `null` inside of it is Undefined Behaviour. It also throws a
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wrench in an important feature of Vec (and indeed all of the std collections):
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an empty Vec doesn't actually allocate at all. So if we can't allocate,
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but also can't put a null pointer in `ptr`, what do we do in
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`Vec::new`? Well, we just put some other garbage in there!
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This is perfectly fine because we already have `cap == 0` as our sentinel for no
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allocation. We don't even need to handle it specially in almost any code because
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we usually need to check if `cap > len` or `len > 0` anyway. The traditional
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Rust value to put here is `0x01`. The standard library actually exposes this
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as `std::rt::heap::EMPTY`. There are quite a few places where we'll want to use
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`heap::EMPTY` because there's no real allocation to talk about but `null` would
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make the compiler angry.
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All of the `heap` API is totally unstable under the `heap_api` feature, though.
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We could trivially define `heap::EMPTY` ourselves, but we'll want the rest of
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the `heap` API anyway, so let's just get that dependency over with.
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