Function sp_std::ptr::drop_in_place 1.8.0[−][src]
#[lang = "drop_in_place"]pub unsafe fn drop_in_place<T>(to_drop: *mut T) where
T: ?Sized,
Executes the destructor (if any) of the pointed-to value.
This is semantically equivalent to calling ptr::read
and discarding
the result, but has the following advantages:
-
It is required to use
drop_in_place
to drop unsized types like trait objects, because they can't be read out onto the stack and dropped normally. -
It is friendlier to the optimizer to do this over
ptr::read
when dropping manually allocated memory (e.g., in the implementations ofBox
/Rc
/Vec
), as the compiler doesn't need to prove that it's sound to elide the copy. -
It can be used to drop pinned data when
T
is notrepr(packed)
(pinned data must not be moved before it is dropped).
Unaligned values cannot be dropped in place, they must be copied to an aligned
location first using ptr::read_unaligned
. For packed structs, this move is
done automatically by the compiler. This means the fields of packed structs
are not dropped in-place.
Safety
Behavior is undefined if any of the following conditions are violated:
-
to_drop
must be valid for both reads and writes. -
to_drop
must be properly aligned. -
The value
to_drop
points to must be valid for dropping, which may mean it must uphold additional invariants - this is type-dependent.
Additionally, if T
is not Copy
, using the pointed-to value after
calling drop_in_place
can cause undefined behavior. Note that *to_drop = foo
counts as a use because it will cause the value to be dropped
again. write()
can be used to overwrite data without causing it to be
dropped.
Note that even if T
has size 0
, the pointer must be non-NULL and properly aligned.
Examples
Manually remove the last item from a vector:
use std::ptr; use std::rc::Rc; let last = Rc::new(1); let weak = Rc::downgrade(&last); let mut v = vec![Rc::new(0), last]; unsafe { // Get a raw pointer to the last element in `v`. let ptr = &mut v[1] as *mut _; // Shorten `v` to prevent the last item from being dropped. We do that first, // to prevent issues if the `drop_in_place` below panics. v.set_len(1); // Without a call `drop_in_place`, the last item would never be dropped, // and the memory it manages would be leaked. ptr::drop_in_place(ptr); } assert_eq!(v, &[0.into()]); // Ensure that the last item was dropped. assert!(weak.upgrade().is_none());
Notice that the compiler performs this copy automatically when dropping packed structs,
i.e., you do not usually have to worry about such issues unless you call drop_in_place
manually.