#[lang = "unsafe_cell"] #[repr(transparent)] #[repr(no_niche)]pub struct UnsafeCell<T> where T: ?Sized, { /* fields omitted */ }
The core primitive for interior mutability in Rust.
UnsafeCell<T>
is a type that wraps some T
and indicates unsafe interior operations on the wrapped type. Types with an UnsafeCell<T>
field are considered to have an 'unsafe interior'. The UnsafeCell<T>
type is the only legal way to obtain aliasable data that is considered mutable. In general, transmuting an &T
type into an &mut T
is considered undefined behavior.
If you have a reference &SomeStruct
, then normally in Rust all fields of SomeStruct
are immutable. The compiler makes optimizations based on the knowledge that &T
is not mutably aliased or mutated, and that &mut T
is unique. UnsafeCell<T>
is the only core language feature to work around the restriction that &T
may not be mutated. All other types that allow internal mutability, such as Cell<T>
and RefCell<T>
, use UnsafeCell
to wrap their internal data. There is no legal way to obtain aliasing &mut
, not even with UnsafeCell<T>
.
The UnsafeCell
API itself is technically very simple: it gives you a raw pointer *mut T
to its contents. It is up to you as the abstraction designer to use that raw pointer correctly.
The precise Rust aliasing rules are somewhat in flux, but the main points are not contentious:
If you create a safe reference with lifetime 'a
(either a &T
or &mut T
reference) that is accessible by safe code (for example, because you returned it), then you must not access the data in any way that contradicts that reference for the remainder of 'a
. For example, this means that if you take the *mut T
from an UnsafeCell<T>
and cast it to an &T
, then the data in T
must remain immutable (modulo any UnsafeCell
data found within T
, of course) until that reference's lifetime expires. Similarly, if you create a &mut T
reference that is released to safe code, then you must not access the data within the UnsafeCell
until that reference expires.
At all times, you must avoid data races. If multiple threads have access to the same UnsafeCell
, then any writes must have a proper happens-before relation to all other accesses (or use atomics).
To assist with proper design, the following scenarios are explicitly declared legal for single-threaded code:
A &T
reference can be released to safe code and there it can co-exist with other &T
references, but not with a &mut T
A &mut T
reference may be released to safe code provided neither other &mut T
nor &T
co-exist with it. A &mut T
must always be unique.
Note that while mutating or mutably aliasing the contents of an &UnsafeCell<T>
is ok (provided you enforce the invariants some other way), it is still undefined behavior to have multiple &mut UnsafeCell<T>
aliases.
use std::cell::UnsafeCell; struct NotThreadSafe<T> { value: UnsafeCell<T>, } unsafe impl<T> Sync for NotThreadSafe<T> {}
impl<T> UnsafeCell<T>
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pub const fn new(value: T) -> UnsafeCell<T>
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Constructs a new instance of UnsafeCell
which will wrap the specified value.
All access to the inner value through methods is unsafe
.
use std::cell::UnsafeCell; let uc = UnsafeCell::new(5);
pub fn into_inner(self) -> T
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Unwraps the value.
use std::cell::UnsafeCell; let uc = UnsafeCell::new(5); let five = uc.into_inner();
impl<T> UnsafeCell<T> where
T: ?Sized,
[src]
pub const fn get(&self) -> *mut T
[src]
Gets a mutable pointer to the wrapped value.
This can be cast to a pointer of any kind. Ensure that the access is unique (no active references, mutable or not) when casting to &mut T
, and ensure that there are no mutations or mutable aliases going on when casting to &T
use std::cell::UnsafeCell; let uc = UnsafeCell::new(5); let five = uc.get();
pub fn raw_get(this: *const UnsafeCell<T>) -> *mut T
[src]
Gets a mutable pointer to the wrapped value. The difference to get
is that this function accepts a raw pointer, which is useful to avoid the creation of temporary references.
The result can be cast to a pointer of any kind. Ensure that the access is unique (no active references, mutable or not) when casting to &mut T
, and ensure that there are no mutations or mutable aliases going on when casting to &T
.
Gradual initialization of an UnsafeCell
requires raw_get
, as calling get
would require creating a reference to uninitialized data:
#![feature(unsafe_cell_raw_get)] use std::cell::UnsafeCell; use std::mem::MaybeUninit; let m = MaybeUninit::<UnsafeCell<i32>>::uninit(); unsafe { UnsafeCell::raw_get(m.as_ptr()).write(5); } let uc = unsafe { m.assume_init() }; assert_eq!(uc.into_inner(), 5);
impl<T, U> CoerceUnsized<UnsafeCell<U>> for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: CoerceUnsized<U>,
[src]
impl<T> Debug for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: Debug + ?Sized,
[src]1.9.0
impl<T> Default for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: Default,
[src]1.10.0
fn default() -> UnsafeCell<T>
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Creates an UnsafeCell
, with the Default
value for T.
impl<T> From<T> for UnsafeCell<T>
[src]1.12.0
fn from(t: T) -> UnsafeCell<T>
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impl<T: ?Sized> !RefUnwindSafe for UnsafeCell<T>
[src]1.9.0
impl<T> !Sync for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: ?Sized,
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impl<T: ?Sized> Send for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: Send,
impl<T: ?Sized> Unpin for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: Unpin,
impl<T: ?Sized> UnwindSafe for UnsafeCell<T> where
T: UnwindSafe,
impl<T> Any for T where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
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impl<T> Borrow<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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fn borrow(&self) -> &TⓘNotable traits for &'_ mut F
impl<'_, F> Future for &'_ mut F where
F: Unpin + Future + ?Sized,
type Output = <F as Future>::Output;
impl<'_, I> Iterator for &'_ mut I where
I: Iterator + ?Sized,
type Item = <I as Iterator>::Item;
impl<R: Read + ?Sized, '_> Read for &'_ mut R
impl<W: Write + ?Sized, '_> Write for &'_ mut W
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impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
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fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut TⓘNotable traits for &'_ mut F
impl<'_, F> Future for &'_ mut F where
F: Unpin + Future + ?Sized,
type Output = <F as Future>::Output;
impl<'_, I> Iterator for &'_ mut I where
I: Iterator + ?Sized,
type Item = <I as Iterator>::Item;
impl<R: Read + ?Sized, '_> Read for &'_ mut R
impl<W: Write + ?Sized, '_> Write for &'_ mut W
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impl<T> From<!> for T
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impl<T> From<T> for T
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impl<T, U> Into<U> for T where
U: From<T>,
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impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T where
U: Into<T>,
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type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
[src]
impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T where
U: TryFrom<T>,
[src]
© 2010 The Rust Project Developers
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/cell/struct.UnsafeCell.html