Trait tracing_core::stdlib::mem::TransmuteFrom
source · pub unsafe trait TransmuteFrom<Src, const ASSUME: Assume = core::::mem::transmutability::TransmuteFrom::{constant#0}>where
Src: ?Sized,{
// Provided method
unsafe fn transmute(src: Src) -> Self
where Self: Sized { ... }
}
transmutability
#99571)Expand description
Marks that Src
is transmutable into Self
.
§Implementation
This trait cannot be implemented explicitly. It is implemented on-the-fly by
the compiler for all types Src
and Self
such that, given a set of safety
obligations on the programmer (see Assume
), the compiler has proved that
the bits of a value of type Src
can be soundly reinterpreted as a Self
.
§Safety
If Dst: TransmuteFrom<Src, ASSUMPTIONS>
, the compiler guarantees that
Src
is soundly union-transmutable into a value of type Dst
, provided
that the programmer has guaranteed that the given ASSUMPTIONS
are satisfied.
A union-transmute is any bit-reinterpretation conversion in the form of:
pub unsafe fn transmute_via_union<Src, Dst>(src: Src) -> Dst {
use core::mem::ManuallyDrop;
#[repr(C)]
union Transmute<Src, Dst> {
src: ManuallyDrop<Src>,
dst: ManuallyDrop<Dst>,
}
let transmute = Transmute {
src: ManuallyDrop::new(src),
};
let dst = transmute.dst;
ManuallyDrop::into_inner(dst)
}
Note that this construction is more permissive than
mem::transmute_copy
; union-transmutes permit
conversions that extend the bits of Src
with trailing padding to fill
trailing uninitialized bytes of Self
; e.g.:
#![feature(transmutability)]
use core::mem::{Assume, TransmuteFrom};
let src = 42u8; // size = 1
#[repr(C, align(2))]
struct Dst(u8); // size = 2
let _ = unsafe {
<Dst as TransmuteFrom<u8, { Assume::SAFETY }>>::transmute(src)
};
§Caveats
§Portability
Implementations of this trait do not provide any guarantee of portability
across toolchains, targets or compilations. This trait may be implemented
for certain combinations of Src
, Self
and ASSUME
on some toolchains,
targets or compilations, but not others. For example, if the layouts of
Src
or Self
are non-deterministic, the presence or absence of an
implementation of this trait may also be non-deterministic. Even if Src
and Self
have deterministic layouts (e.g., they are repr(C)
structs),
Rust does not specify the alignments of its primitive integer types, and
layouts that involve these types may vary across toolchains, targets or
compilations.
§Stability
Implementations of this trait do not provide any guarantee of SemVer
stability across the crate versions that define the Src
and Self
types.
If SemVer stability is crucial to your application, you must consult the
documentation of Src
and Self
s’ defining crates. Note that the presence
of repr(C)
, alone, does not carry a safety invariant of SemVer stability.
Furthermore, stability does not imply portability. For example, the size of
usize
is stable, but not portable.
Provided Methods§
sourceunsafe fn transmute(src: Src) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (transmutability
#99571)
unsafe fn transmute(src: Src) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
transmutability
#99571)Transmutes a Src
value into a Self
.
§Safety
The safety obligations of the caller depend on the value of ASSUME
:
- If
ASSUME.alignment
, the caller must guarantee that the addresses of references in the returnedSelf
satisfy the alignment requirements of their referent types. - If
ASSUME.lifetimes
, the caller must guarantee that references in the returnedSelf
will not outlive their referents. - If
ASSUME.safety
, the returned value might not satisfy the library safety invariants ofSelf
, and the caller must guarantee that undefined behavior does not arise from uses of the returned value. - If
ASSUME.validity
, the caller must guarantee thatsrc
is a bit-valid instance ofSelf
.
When satisfying the above obligations (if any), the caller must not assume that this trait provides any inherent guarantee of layout portability or stability.