Function sp_std::ptr::read 1.0.0 (const: unstable)[−][src]
pub unsafe fn read<T>(src: *const T) -> T
Expand description
Reads the value from src
without moving it. This leaves the
memory in src
unchanged.
Safety
Behavior is undefined if any of the following conditions are violated:
-
src
must be valid for reads. -
src
must be properly aligned. Useread_unaligned
if this is not the case. -
src
must point to a properly initialized value of typeT
.
Note that even if T
has size 0
, the pointer must be non-null and properly aligned.
Examples
Basic usage:
let x = 12; let y = &x as *const i32; unsafe { assert_eq!(std::ptr::read(y), 12); }
Manually implement mem::swap
:
use std::ptr; fn swap<T>(a: &mut T, b: &mut T) { unsafe { // Create a bitwise copy of the value at `a` in `tmp`. let tmp = ptr::read(a); // Exiting at this point (either by explicitly returning or by // calling a function which panics) would cause the value in `tmp` to // be dropped while the same value is still referenced by `a`. This // could trigger undefined behavior if `T` is not `Copy`. // Create a bitwise copy of the value at `b` in `a`. // This is safe because mutable references cannot alias. ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(b, a, 1); // As above, exiting here could trigger undefined behavior because // the same value is referenced by `a` and `b`. // Move `tmp` into `b`. ptr::write(b, tmp); // `tmp` has been moved (`write` takes ownership of its second argument), // so nothing is dropped implicitly here. } } let mut foo = "foo".to_owned(); let mut bar = "bar".to_owned(); swap(&mut foo, &mut bar); assert_eq!(foo, "bar"); assert_eq!(bar, "foo");
Ownership of the Returned Value
read
creates a bitwise copy of T
, regardless of whether T
is Copy
.
If T
is not Copy
, using both the returned value and the value at
*src
can violate memory safety. Note that assigning to *src
counts as a
use because it will attempt to drop the value at *src
.
write()
can be used to overwrite data without causing it to be dropped.
use std::ptr; let mut s = String::from("foo"); unsafe { // `s2` now points to the same underlying memory as `s`. let mut s2: String = ptr::read(&s); assert_eq!(s2, "foo"); // Assigning to `s2` causes its original value to be dropped. Beyond // this point, `s` must no longer be used, as the underlying memory has // been freed. s2 = String::default(); assert_eq!(s2, ""); // Assigning to `s` would cause the old value to be dropped again, // resulting in undefined behavior. // s = String::from("bar"); // ERROR // `ptr::write` can be used to overwrite a value without dropping it. ptr::write(&mut s, String::from("bar")); } assert_eq!(s, "bar");