Function sp_std::ptr::drop_in_place
1.8.0 · source · pub unsafe fn drop_in_place<T>(to_drop: *mut T)where
T: ?Sized,
Expand description
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, even ifT
has size 0. -
to_drop
must be nonnull, even ifT
has size 0. -
The value
to_drop
points to must be valid for dropping, which may mean it must uphold additional invariants. These invariants depend on the type of the value being dropped. For instance, when dropping a Box, the box’s pointer to the heap must be valid. -
While
drop_in_place
is executing, the only way to access parts ofto_drop
is through the&mut self
references supplied to theDrop::drop
methods thatdrop_in_place
invokes.
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.
§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());