owning.rs
117 lines
| 4.8 KiB
| application/rls-services+xml
|
RustLexer
Simon Sapin
|
r47893 | use cpython::PyBytes; | ||
use cpython::Python; | ||||
use hg::dirstate_tree::dirstate_map::DirstateMap; | ||||
use hg::DirstateError; | ||||
use hg::DirstateParents; | ||||
/// Keep a `DirstateMap<'on_disk>` next to the `on_disk` buffer that it | ||||
/// borrows. This is similar to the owning-ref crate. | ||||
/// | ||||
/// This is similar to [`OwningRef`] which is more limited because it | ||||
/// represents exactly one `&T` reference next to the value it borrows, as | ||||
/// opposed to a struct that may contain an arbitrary number of references in | ||||
/// arbitrarily-nested data structures. | ||||
/// | ||||
/// [`OwningRef`]: https://docs.rs/owning_ref/0.4.1/owning_ref/struct.OwningRef.html | ||||
pub(super) struct OwningDirstateMap { | ||||
/// Owned handle to a bytes buffer with a stable address. | ||||
/// | ||||
/// See <https://docs.rs/owning_ref/0.4.1/owning_ref/trait.StableAddress.html>. | ||||
on_disk: PyBytes, | ||||
/// Pointer for `Box<DirstateMap<'on_disk>>`, typed-erased because the | ||||
/// language cannot represent a lifetime referencing a sibling field. | ||||
/// This is not quite a self-referencial struct (moving this struct is not | ||||
/// a problem as it doesn’t change the address of the bytes buffer owned | ||||
/// by `PyBytes`) but touches similar borrow-checker limitations. | ||||
ptr: *mut (), | ||||
} | ||||
impl OwningDirstateMap { | ||||
Simon Sapin
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r48474 | pub fn new_v1( | ||
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r47893 | py: Python, | ||
on_disk: PyBytes, | ||||
) -> Result<(Self, Option<DirstateParents>), DirstateError> { | ||||
let bytes: &'_ [u8] = on_disk.data(py); | ||||
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r48474 | let (map, parents) = DirstateMap::new_v1(bytes)?; | ||
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r47893 | |||
// Like in `bytes` above, this `'_` lifetime parameter borrows from | ||||
// the bytes buffer owned by `on_disk`. | ||||
let ptr: *mut DirstateMap<'_> = Box::into_raw(Box::new(map)); | ||||
// Erase the pointed type entirely in order to erase the lifetime. | ||||
let ptr: *mut () = ptr.cast(); | ||||
Ok((Self { on_disk, ptr }, parents)) | ||||
} | ||||
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r48474 | pub fn new_v2( | ||
py: Python, | ||||
on_disk: PyBytes, | ||||
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r48475 | data_size: usize, | ||
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r48482 | tree_metadata: PyBytes, | ||
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r48474 | ) -> Result<Self, DirstateError> { | ||
let bytes: &'_ [u8] = on_disk.data(py); | ||||
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r48482 | let map = | ||
DirstateMap::new_v2(bytes, data_size, tree_metadata.data(py))?; | ||||
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r48474 | |||
// Like in `bytes` above, this `'_` lifetime parameter borrows from | ||||
// the bytes buffer owned by `on_disk`. | ||||
let ptr: *mut DirstateMap<'_> = Box::into_raw(Box::new(map)); | ||||
// Erase the pointed type entirely in order to erase the lifetime. | ||||
let ptr: *mut () = ptr.cast(); | ||||
Ok(Self { on_disk, ptr }) | ||||
} | ||||
Simon Sapin
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r47893 | pub fn get_mut<'a>(&'a mut self) -> &'a mut DirstateMap<'a> { | ||
// SAFETY: We cast the type-erased pointer back to the same type it had | ||||
// in `new`, except with a different lifetime parameter. This time we | ||||
// connect the lifetime to that of `self`. This cast is valid because | ||||
// `self` owns the same `PyBytes` whose buffer `DirstateMap` | ||||
// references. That buffer has a stable memory address because the byte | ||||
// string value of a `PyBytes` is immutable. | ||||
let ptr: *mut DirstateMap<'a> = self.ptr.cast(); | ||||
// SAFETY: we dereference that pointer, connecting the lifetime of the | ||||
// new `&mut` to that of `self`. This is valid because the | ||||
// raw pointer is to a boxed value, and `self` owns that box. | ||||
unsafe { &mut *ptr } | ||||
} | ||||
pub fn get<'a>(&'a self) -> &'a DirstateMap<'a> { | ||||
// SAFETY: same reasoning as in `get_mut` above. | ||||
let ptr: *mut DirstateMap<'a> = self.ptr.cast(); | ||||
unsafe { &*ptr } | ||||
} | ||||
} | ||||
impl Drop for OwningDirstateMap { | ||||
fn drop(&mut self) { | ||||
// Silence a "field is never read" warning, and demonstrate that this | ||||
// value is still alive. | ||||
let _ = &self.on_disk; | ||||
// SAFETY: this cast is the same as in `get_mut`, and is valid for the | ||||
// same reason. `self.on_disk` still exists at this point, drop glue | ||||
// will drop it implicitly after this `drop` method returns. | ||||
let ptr: *mut DirstateMap<'_> = self.ptr.cast(); | ||||
// SAFETY: `Box::from_raw` takes ownership of the box away from `self`. | ||||
// This is fine because drop glue does nothig for `*mut ()` and we’re | ||||
// in `drop`, so `get` and `get_mut` cannot be called again. | ||||
unsafe { drop(Box::from_raw(ptr)) } | ||||
} | ||||
} | ||||
fn _static_assert_is_send<T: Send>() {} | ||||
fn _static_assert_fields_are_send() { | ||||
_static_assert_is_send::<PyBytes>(); | ||||
_static_assert_is_send::<Box<DirstateMap<'_>>>(); | ||||
} | ||||
// SAFETY: we don’t get this impl implicitly because `*mut (): !Send` because | ||||
// thread-safety of raw pointers is unknown in the general case. However this | ||||
// particular raw pointer represents a `Box<DirstateMap<'on_disk>>` that we | ||||
// own. Since that `Box` and `PyBytes` are both `Send` as shown in above, it | ||||
// is sound to mark this struct as `Send` too. | ||||
unsafe impl Send for OwningDirstateMap {} | ||||