Primitive Type pointer
Expand description
Raw, unsafe pointers, *const T
, and *mut T
.
Working with raw pointers in Rust is uncommon, typically limited to a few patterns. Raw pointers
can be out-of-bounds, unaligned, or null
. However, when loading from or storing to a raw
pointer, it must be valid for the given access and aligned. When using a field expression,
tuple index expression, or array/slice index expression on a raw pointer, it follows the rules
of in-bounds pointer arithmetic.
Storing through a raw pointer using *ptr = data
calls drop
on the old value, so
write
must be used if the type has drop glue and memory is not already
initialized - otherwise drop
would be called on the uninitialized memory.
Use the null
and null_mut
functions to create null pointers, and the
is_null
method of the *const T
and *mut T
types to check for null.
The *const T
and *mut T
types also define the offset
method, for
pointer math.
§Common ways to create raw pointers
§1. Coerce a reference (&T
) or mutable reference (&mut T
).
let my_num: i32 = 10;
let my_num_ptr: *const i32 = &my_num;
let mut my_speed: i32 = 88;
let my_speed_ptr: *mut i32 = &mut my_speed;
To get a pointer to a boxed value, dereference the box:
let my_num: Box<i32> = Box::new(10);
let my_num_ptr: *const i32 = &*my_num;
let mut my_speed: Box<i32> = Box::new(88);
let my_speed_ptr: *mut i32 = &mut *my_speed;
This does not take ownership of the original allocation and requires no resource management later, but you must not use the pointer after its lifetime.
§2. Consume a box (Box<T>
).
The into_raw
function consumes a box and returns
the raw pointer. It doesn’t destroy T
or deallocate any memory.
let my_speed: Box<i32> = Box::new(88);
let my_speed: *mut i32 = Box::into_raw(my_speed);
// By taking ownership of the original `Box<T>` though
// we are obligated to put it together later to be destroyed.
unsafe {
drop(Box::from_raw(my_speed));
}
Note that here the call to drop
is for clarity - it indicates
that we are done with the given value and it should be destroyed.
§3. Create it using ptr::addr_of!
Instead of coercing a reference to a raw pointer, you can use the macros
ptr::addr_of!
(for *const T
) and ptr::addr_of_mut!
(for *mut T
).
These macros allow you to create raw pointers to fields to which you cannot
create a reference (without causing undefined behavior), such as an
unaligned field. This might be necessary if packed structs or uninitialized
memory is involved.
#[derive(Debug, Default, Copy, Clone)]
#[repr(C, packed)]
struct S {
aligned: u8,
unaligned: u32,
}
let s = S::default();
let p = std::ptr::addr_of!(s.unaligned); // not allowed with coercion
§4. Get it from C.
#[allow(unused_extern_crates)]
extern crate libc;
use std::mem;
unsafe {
let my_num: *mut i32 = libc::malloc(mem::size_of::<i32>()) as *mut i32;
if my_num.is_null() {
panic!("failed to allocate memory");
}
libc::free(my_num as *mut core::ffi::c_void);
}
Usually you wouldn’t literally use malloc
and free
from Rust,
but C APIs hand out a lot of pointers generally, so are a common source
of raw pointers in Rust.
Implementations§
Source§impl<T: ?Sized> *const T
impl<T: ?Sized> *const T
1.0.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn is_null(self) -> bool
pub fn is_null(self) -> bool
Returns true
if the pointer is null.
Note that unsized types have many possible null pointers, as only the raw data pointer is considered, not their length, vtable, etc. Therefore, two pointers that are null may still not compare equal to each other.
§Behavior during const evaluation
When this function is used during const evaluation, it may return false
for pointers
that turn out to be null at runtime. Specifically, when a pointer to some memory
is offset beyond its bounds in such a way that the resulting pointer is null,
the function will still return false
. There is no way for CTFE to know
the absolute position of that memory, so we cannot tell if the pointer is
null or not.
§Examples
1.38.0 (const: 1.38.0) · Sourcepub const fn cast<U>(self) -> *const U
pub const fn cast<U>(self) -> *const U
Casts to a pointer of another type.
Sourcepub const fn with_metadata_of<U>(self, meta: *const U) -> *const Uwhere
U: ?Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (set_ptr_value
#75091)
pub const fn with_metadata_of<U>(self, meta: *const U) -> *const Uwhere
U: ?Sized,
set_ptr_value
#75091)Uses the address value in a new pointer of another type.
This operation will ignore the address part of its meta
operand and discard existing
metadata of self
. For pointers to a sized types (thin pointers), this has the same effect
as a simple cast. For pointers to an unsized type (fat pointers) this recombines the address
with new metadata such as slice lengths or dyn
-vtable.
The resulting pointer will have provenance of self
. This operation is semantically the
same as creating a new pointer with the data pointer value of self
but the metadata of
meta
, being fat or thin depending on the meta
operand.
§Examples
This function is primarily useful for enabling pointer arithmetic on potentially fat pointers. The pointer is cast to a sized pointee to utilize offset operations and then recombined with its own original metadata.
#![feature(set_ptr_value)]
let arr: [i32; 3] = [1, 2, 3];
let mut ptr = arr.as_ptr() as *const dyn Debug;
let thin = ptr as *const u8;
unsafe {
ptr = thin.add(8).with_metadata_of(ptr);
println!("{:?}", &*ptr); // will print "3"
}
§Incorrect usage
The provenance from pointers is not combined. The result must only be used to refer to the
address allowed by self
.
#![feature(set_ptr_value)]
let x = 0u32;
let y = 1u32;
let x = (&x) as *const u32;
let y = (&y) as *const u32;
let offset = (x as usize - y as usize) / 4;
let bad = x.wrapping_add(offset).with_metadata_of(y);
// This dereference is UB. The pointer only has provenance for `x` but points to `y`.
println!("{:?}", unsafe { &*bad });
1.65.0 (const: 1.65.0) · Sourcepub const fn cast_mut(self) -> *mut T
pub const fn cast_mut(self) -> *mut T
Changes constness without changing the type.
This is a bit safer than as
because it wouldn’t silently change the type if the code is
refactored.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn addr(self) -> usize
pub fn addr(self) -> usize
Gets the “address” portion of the pointer.
This is similar to self as usize
, except that the provenance of
the pointer is discarded and not exposed. This means that
casting the returned address back to a pointer yields a pointer without
provenance, which is undefined behavior to dereference. To properly
restore the lost information and obtain a dereferenceable pointer, use
with_addr
or map_addr
.
If using those APIs is not possible because there is no way to preserve a pointer with the
required provenance, then Strict Provenance might not be for you. Use pointer-integer casts
or expose_provenance
and with_exposed_provenance
instead. However, note that this makes your code less portable and less amenable to tools
that check for compliance with the Rust memory model.
On most platforms this will produce a value with the same bytes as the original pointer, because all the bytes are dedicated to describing the address. Platforms which need to store additional information in the pointer may perform a change of representation to produce a value containing only the address portion of the pointer. What that means is up to the platform to define.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn expose_provenance(self) -> usize
pub fn expose_provenance(self) -> usize
Exposes the “provenance” part of the pointer for future use in
with_exposed_provenance
and returns the “address” portion.
This is equivalent to self as usize
, which semantically discards provenance information.
Furthermore, this (like the as
cast) has the implicit side-effect of marking the
provenance as ‘exposed’, so on platforms that support it you can later call
with_exposed_provenance
to reconstitute the original pointer including its provenance.
Due to its inherent ambiguity, with_exposed_provenance
may not be supported by tools
that help you to stay conformant with the Rust memory model. It is recommended to use
Strict Provenance APIs such as with_addr
wherever possible, in which case addr
should be used instead of expose_provenance
.
On most platforms this will produce a value with the same bytes as the original pointer,
because all the bytes are dedicated to describing the address. Platforms which need to store
additional information in the pointer may not support this operation, since the ‘expose’
side-effect which is required for with_exposed_provenance
to work is typically not
available.
This is an Exposed Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn with_addr(self, addr: usize) -> Self
pub fn with_addr(self, addr: usize) -> Self
Creates a new pointer with the given address and the provenance of
self
.
This is similar to a addr as *const T
cast, but copies
the provenance of self
to the new pointer.
This avoids the inherent ambiguity of the unary cast.
This is equivalent to using wrapping_offset
to offset
self
to the given address, and therefore has all the same capabilities and restrictions.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn map_addr(self, f: impl FnOnce(usize) -> usize) -> Self
pub fn map_addr(self, f: impl FnOnce(usize) -> usize) -> Self
Creates a new pointer by mapping self
’s address to a new one, preserving the
provenance of self
.
This is a convenience for with_addr
, see that method for details.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
Sourcepub const fn to_raw_parts(self) -> (*const (), <T as Pointee>::Metadata)
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_metadata
#81513)
pub const fn to_raw_parts(self) -> (*const (), <T as Pointee>::Metadata)
ptr_metadata
#81513)Decompose a (possibly wide) pointer into its data pointer and metadata components.
The pointer can be later reconstructed with from_raw_parts
.
1.9.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>
pub unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>
Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. If the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_ref
must be used instead.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
let ptr: *const u8 = &10u8 as *const u8;
unsafe {
if let Some(val_back) = ptr.as_ref() {
assert_eq!(val_back, &10);
}
}
§Null-unchecked version
If you are sure the pointer can never be null and are looking for some kind of
as_ref_unchecked
that returns the &T
instead of Option<&T>
, know that you can
dereference the pointer directly.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_ref_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)
pub const unsafe fn as_ref_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a T
ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)Returns a shared reference to the value behind the pointer.
If the pointer may be null or the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_ref
must be used instead.
If the pointer may be null, but the value is known to have been initialized, as_ref
must be used instead.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_ref
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
1.0.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn offset(self, count: isize) -> *const Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn offset(self, count: isize) -> *const Twhere
T: Sized,
Adds a signed offset to a pointer.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_offset
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
Adds a signed offset in bytes to a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using offset on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.16.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_offset(self, count: isize) -> *const Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_offset(self, count: isize) -> *const Twhere
T: Sized,
Adds a signed offset to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_offset((y as isize) - (x as isize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to offset
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: offset
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_offset
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. offset
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_offset(o).wrapping_offset(o.wrapping_neg())
is always the same as x
. In other
words, leaving the allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements
let data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *const u8 = data.as_ptr();
let step = 2;
let end_rounded_up = ptr.wrapping_offset(6);
let mut out = String::new();
while ptr != end_rounded_up {
unsafe {
write!(&mut out, "{}, ", *ptr).unwrap();
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_offset(step);
}
assert_eq!(out.as_str(), "1, 3, 5, ");
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
Adds a signed offset in bytes to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_offset on it. See that method
for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
Sourcepub fn mask(self, mask: usize) -> *const T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_mask
#98290)
pub fn mask(self, mask: usize) -> *const T
ptr_mask
#98290)Masks out bits of the pointer according to a mask.
This is convenience for ptr.map_addr(|a| a & mask)
.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
§Examples
#![feature(ptr_mask)]
let v = 17_u32;
let ptr: *const u32 = &v;
// `u32` is 4 bytes aligned,
// which means that lower 2 bits are always 0.
let tag_mask = 0b11;
let ptr_mask = !tag_mask;
// We can store something in these lower bits
let tagged_ptr = ptr.map_addr(|a| a | 0b10);
// Get the "tag" back
let tag = tagged_ptr.addr() & tag_mask;
assert_eq!(tag, 0b10);
// Note that `tagged_ptr` is unaligned, it's UB to read from it.
// To get original pointer `mask` can be used:
let masked_ptr = tagged_ptr.mask(ptr_mask);
assert_eq!(unsafe { *masked_ptr }, 17);
1.47.0 (const: 1.65.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn offset_from(self, origin: *const T) -> isizewhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn offset_from(self, origin: *const T) -> isizewhere
T: Sized,
Calculates the distance between two pointers. The returned value is in
units of T: the distance in bytes divided by mem::size_of::<T>()
.
This is equivalent to (self as isize - origin as isize) / (mem::size_of::<T>() as isize)
,
except that it has a lot more opportunities for UB, in exchange for the compiler
better understanding what you are doing.
The primary motivation of this method is for computing the len
of an array/slice
of T
that you are currently representing as a “start” and “end” pointer
(and “end” is “one past the end” of the array).
In that case, end.offset_from(start)
gets you the length of the array.
All of the following safety requirements are trivially satisfied for this usecase.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
self
andorigin
must either- point to the same address, or
- both be derived from a pointer to the same allocated object, and the memory range between the two pointers must be in bounds of that object. (See below for an example.)
-
The distance between the pointers, in bytes, must be an exact multiple of the size of
T
.
As a consequence, the absolute distance between the pointers, in bytes, computed on
mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), cannot overflow an isize
. This is
implied by the in-bounds requirement, and the fact that no allocated object can be larger
than isize::MAX
bytes.
The requirement for pointers to be derived from the same allocated object is primarily
needed for const
-compatibility: the distance between pointers into different allocated
objects is not known at compile-time. However, the requirement also exists at
runtime and may be exploited by optimizations. If you wish to compute the difference between
pointers that are not guaranteed to be from the same allocation, use (self as isize - origin as isize) / mem::size_of::<T>()
.
§Panics
This function panics if T
is a Zero-Sized Type (“ZST”).
§Examples
Basic usage:
let a = [0; 5];
let ptr1: *const i32 = &a[1];
let ptr2: *const i32 = &a[3];
unsafe {
assert_eq!(ptr2.offset_from(ptr1), 2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.offset_from(ptr2), -2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.offset(2), ptr2);
assert_eq!(ptr2.offset(-2), ptr1);
}
Incorrect usage:
let ptr1 = Box::into_raw(Box::new(0u8)) as *const u8;
let ptr2 = Box::into_raw(Box::new(1u8)) as *const u8;
let diff = (ptr2 as isize).wrapping_sub(ptr1 as isize);
// Make ptr2_other an "alias" of ptr2.add(1), but derived from ptr1.
let ptr2_other = (ptr1 as *const u8).wrapping_offset(diff).wrapping_offset(1);
assert_eq!(ptr2 as usize, ptr2_other as usize);
// Since ptr2_other and ptr2 are derived from pointers to different objects,
// computing their offset is undefined behavior, even though
// they point to addresses that are in-bounds of the same object!
unsafe {
let one = ptr2_other.offset_from(ptr2); // Undefined Behavior! ⚠️
}
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_offset_from<U: ?Sized>(self, origin: *const U) -> isize
pub const unsafe fn byte_offset_from<U: ?Sized>(self, origin: *const U) -> isize
Calculates the distance between two pointers. The returned value is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using offset_from
on it. See that method for
documentation and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation considers only the data pointers,
ignoring the metadata.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn sub_ptr(self, origin: *const T) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_sub_ptr
#95892)
pub const unsafe fn sub_ptr(self, origin: *const T) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
ptr_sub_ptr
#95892)Calculates the distance between two pointers, where it’s known that
self
is equal to or greater than origin
. The returned value is in
units of T: the distance in bytes is divided by mem::size_of::<T>()
.
This computes the same value that offset_from
would compute, but with the added precondition that the offset is
guaranteed to be non-negative. This method is equivalent to
usize::try_from(self.offset_from(origin)).unwrap_unchecked()
,
but it provides slightly more information to the optimizer, which can
sometimes allow it to optimize slightly better with some backends.
This method can be thought of as recovering the count
that was passed
to add
(or, with the parameters in the other order,
to sub
). The following are all equivalent, assuming
that their safety preconditions are met:
§Safety
-
The distance between the pointers must be non-negative (
self >= origin
) -
All the safety conditions of
offset_from
apply to this method as well; see it for the full details.
Importantly, despite the return type of this method being able to represent
a larger offset, it’s still not permitted to pass pointers which differ
by more than isize::MAX
bytes. As such, the result of this method will
always be less than or equal to isize::MAX as usize
.
§Panics
This function panics if T
is a Zero-Sized Type (“ZST”).
§Examples
#![feature(ptr_sub_ptr)]
let a = [0; 5];
let ptr1: *const i32 = &a[1];
let ptr2: *const i32 = &a[3];
unsafe {
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub_ptr(ptr1), 2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.add(2), ptr2);
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub(2), ptr1);
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub_ptr(ptr2), 0);
}
// This would be incorrect, as the pointers are not correctly ordered:
// ptr1.sub_ptr(ptr2)
Sourcepub const fn guaranteed_eq(self, other: *const T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)
pub const fn guaranteed_eq(self, other: *const T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)Returns whether two pointers are guaranteed to be equal.
At runtime this function behaves like Some(self == other)
.
However, in some contexts (e.g., compile-time evaluation),
it is not always possible to determine equality of two pointers, so this function may
spuriously return None
for pointers that later actually turn out to have its equality known.
But when it returns Some
, the pointers’ equality is guaranteed to be known.
The return value may change from Some
to None
and vice versa depending on the compiler
version and unsafe code must not
rely on the result of this function for soundness. It is suggested to only use this function
for performance optimizations where spurious None
return values by this function do not
affect the outcome, but just the performance.
The consequences of using this method to make runtime and compile-time code behave
differently have not been explored. This method should not be used to introduce such
differences, and it should also not be stabilized before we have a better understanding
of this issue.
Sourcepub const fn guaranteed_ne(self, other: *const T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)
pub const fn guaranteed_ne(self, other: *const T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)Returns whether two pointers are guaranteed to be inequal.
At runtime this function behaves like Some(self != other)
.
However, in some contexts (e.g., compile-time evaluation),
it is not always possible to determine inequality of two pointers, so this function may
spuriously return None
for pointers that later actually turn out to have its inequality known.
But when it returns Some
, the pointers’ inequality is guaranteed to be known.
The return value may change from Some
to None
and vice versa depending on the compiler
version and unsafe code must not
rely on the result of this function for soundness. It is suggested to only use this function
for performance optimizations where spurious None
return values by this function do not
affect the outcome, but just the performance.
The consequences of using this method to make runtime and compile-time code behave
differently have not been explored. This method should not be used to introduce such
differences, and it should also not be stabilized before we have a better understanding
of this issue.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Adds an unsigned offset to a pointer.
This can only move the pointer forward (or not move it). If you need to move forward or
backward depending on the value, then you might want offset
instead
which takes a signed offset.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_add
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
Adds an unsigned offset in bytes to a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using add on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Subtracts an unsigned offset from a pointer.
This can only move the pointer backward (or not move it). If you need to move forward or
backward depending on the value, then you might want offset
instead
which takes a signed offset.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_sub
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
Subtracts an unsigned offset in bytes from a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using sub on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Adds an unsigned offset to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_add((y as usize) - (x as usize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to add
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: add
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_add
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. add
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_add(o).wrapping_sub(o)
is always the same as x
. In other words, leaving the
allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements
let data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *const u8 = data.as_ptr();
let step = 2;
let end_rounded_up = ptr.wrapping_add(6);
let mut out = String::new();
while ptr != end_rounded_up {
unsafe {
write!(&mut out, "{}, ", *ptr).unwrap();
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_add(step);
}
assert_eq!(out, "1, 3, 5, ");
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
Adds an unsigned offset in bytes to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_add on it. See that method for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Subtracts an unsigned offset from a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_sub((x as usize) - (y as usize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to sub
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: sub
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_sub
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. sub
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_add(o).wrapping_sub(o)
is always the same as x
. In other words, leaving the
allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements (backwards)
let data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *const u8 = data.as_ptr();
let start_rounded_down = ptr.wrapping_sub(2);
ptr = ptr.wrapping_add(4);
let step = 2;
let mut out = String::new();
while ptr != start_rounded_down {
unsafe {
write!(&mut out, "{}, ", *ptr).unwrap();
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_sub(step);
}
assert_eq!(out, "5, 3, 1, ");
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
Subtracts an unsigned offset in bytes from a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_sub on it. See that method for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.71.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn read(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn read(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Reads the value from self
without moving it. This leaves the
memory in self
unchanged.
See ptr::read
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 · Sourcepub unsafe fn read_volatile(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub unsafe fn read_volatile(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Performs a volatile read of the value from self
without moving it. This
leaves the memory in self
unchanged.
Volatile operations are intended to act on I/O memory, and are guaranteed to not be elided or reordered by the compiler across other volatile operations.
See ptr::read_volatile
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.71.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn read_unaligned(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn read_unaligned(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Reads the value from self
without moving it. This leaves the
memory in self
unchanged.
Unlike read
, the pointer may be unaligned.
See ptr::read_unaligned
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_to(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_to(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_to_nonoverlapping(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_to_nonoverlapping(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
Copies count * size_of<T>
bytes from self
to dest
. The source
and destination may not overlap.
NOTE: this has the same argument order as ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
.
See ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
for safety concerns and examples.
1.36.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn align_offset(self, align: usize) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
pub fn align_offset(self, align: usize) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
Computes the offset that needs to be applied to the pointer in order to make it aligned to
align
.
If it is not possible to align the pointer, the implementation returns
usize::MAX
.
The offset is expressed in number of T
elements, and not bytes. The value returned can be
used with the wrapping_add
method.
There are no guarantees whatsoever that offsetting the pointer will not overflow or go beyond the allocation that the pointer points into. It is up to the caller to ensure that the returned offset is correct in all terms other than alignment.
When this is called during compile-time evaluation (which is unstable), the implementation
may return usize::MAX
in cases where that can never happen at runtime. This is because the
actual alignment of pointers is not known yet during compile-time, so an offset with
guaranteed alignment can sometimes not be computed. For example, a buffer declared as [u8; N]
might be allocated at an odd or an even address, but at compile-time this is not yet
known, so the execution has to be correct for either choice. It is therefore impossible to
find an offset that is guaranteed to be 2-aligned. (This behavior is subject to change, as usual
for unstable APIs.)
§Panics
The function panics if align
is not a power-of-two.
§Examples
Accessing adjacent u8
as u16
use std::mem::align_of;
let x = [5_u8, 6, 7, 8, 9];
let ptr = x.as_ptr();
let offset = ptr.align_offset(align_of::<u16>());
if offset < x.len() - 1 {
let u16_ptr = ptr.add(offset).cast::<u16>();
assert!(*u16_ptr == u16::from_ne_bytes([5, 6]) || *u16_ptr == u16::from_ne_bytes([6, 7]));
} else {
// while the pointer can be aligned via `offset`, it would point
// outside the allocation
}
1.79.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn is_aligned(self) -> boolwhere
T: Sized,
pub fn is_aligned(self) -> boolwhere
T: Sized,
Returns whether the pointer is properly aligned for T
.
§Examples
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
let data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &data as *const AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_byte_add(1).is_aligned());
§At compiletime
Note: Alignment at compiletime is experimental and subject to change. See the tracking issue for details.
At compiletime, the compiler may not know where a value will end up in memory.
Calling this function on a pointer created from a reference at compiletime will only
return true
if the pointer is guaranteed to be aligned. This means that the pointer
is never aligned if cast to a type with a stricter alignment than the reference’s
underlying allocation.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
const _: () = {
let data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &data as *const AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
// At runtime either `ptr1` or `ptr2` would be aligned, but at compiletime neither is aligned.
let ptr1 = ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>();
let ptr2 = ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>();
assert!(!ptr1.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr2.is_aligned());
};
Due to this behavior, it is possible that a runtime pointer derived from a compiletime pointer is aligned, even if the compiletime pointer wasn’t aligned.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
// At compiletime, neither `COMPTIME_PTR` nor `COMPTIME_PTR + 1` is aligned.
const COMPTIME_PTR: *const AlignedI32 = &AlignedI32(42);
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned());
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned());
// At runtime, either `runtime_ptr` or `runtime_ptr + 1` is aligned.
let runtime_ptr = COMPTIME_PTR;
assert_ne!(
runtime_ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned(),
runtime_ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned(),
);
If a pointer is created from a fixed address, this function behaves the same during runtime and compiletime.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
const _: () = {
let ptr = 40 as *const AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
// For pointers with a known address, runtime and compiletime behavior are identical.
let ptr1 = ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>();
let ptr2 = ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>();
assert!(ptr1.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr2.is_aligned());
};
Sourcepub const fn is_aligned_to(self, align: usize) -> bool
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (pointer_is_aligned_to
#96284)
pub const fn is_aligned_to(self, align: usize) -> bool
pointer_is_aligned_to
#96284)Returns whether the pointer is aligned to align
.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation considers only the data pointer,
ignoring the metadata.
§Panics
The function panics if align
is not a power-of-two (this includes 0).
§Examples
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
let data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &data as *const AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(1));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(4));
assert!(ptr.wrapping_byte_add(2).is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_byte_add(2).is_aligned_to(4));
assert_ne!(ptr.is_aligned_to(8), ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
§At compiletime
Note: Alignment at compiletime is experimental and subject to change. See the tracking issue for details.
At compiletime, the compiler may not know where a value will end up in memory.
Calling this function on a pointer created from a reference at compiletime will only
return true
if the pointer is guaranteed to be aligned. This means that the pointer
cannot be stricter aligned than the reference’s underlying allocation.
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
const _: () = {
let data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &data as *const AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(1));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(4));
// At compiletime, we know for sure that the pointer isn't aligned to 8.
assert!(!ptr.is_aligned_to(8));
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
};
Due to this behavior, it is possible that a runtime pointer derived from a compiletime pointer is aligned, even if the compiletime pointer wasn’t aligned.
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
// At compiletime, neither `COMPTIME_PTR` nor `COMPTIME_PTR + 1` is aligned.
const COMPTIME_PTR: *const AlignedI32 = &AlignedI32(42);
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.is_aligned_to(8));
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
// At runtime, either `runtime_ptr` or `runtime_ptr + 1` is aligned.
let runtime_ptr = COMPTIME_PTR;
assert_ne!(
runtime_ptr.is_aligned_to(8),
runtime_ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8),
);
If a pointer is created from a fixed address, this function behaves the same during runtime and compiletime.
Source§impl<T> *const [T]
impl<T> *const [T]
1.79.0 (const: 1.79.0) · Sourcepub const fn len(self) -> usize
pub const fn len(self) -> usize
Returns the length of a raw slice.
The returned value is the number of elements, not the number of bytes.
This function is safe, even when the raw slice cannot be cast to a slice reference because the pointer is null or unaligned.
§Examples
1.79.0 (const: 1.79.0) · Sourcepub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool
pub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool
Returns true
if the raw slice has a length of 0.
§Examples
Sourcepub const fn as_ptr(self) -> *const T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (slice_ptr_get
#74265)
pub const fn as_ptr(self) -> *const T
slice_ptr_get
#74265)Returns a raw pointer to the slice’s buffer.
This is equivalent to casting self
to *const T
, but more type-safe.
§Examples
Sourcepub unsafe fn get_unchecked<I>(self, index: I) -> *const I::Outputwhere
I: SliceIndex<[T]>,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (slice_ptr_get
#74265)
pub unsafe fn get_unchecked<I>(self, index: I) -> *const I::Outputwhere
I: SliceIndex<[T]>,
slice_ptr_get
#74265)Returns a raw pointer to an element or subslice, without doing bounds checking.
Calling this method with an out-of-bounds index or when self
is not dereferenceable
is undefined behavior even if the resulting pointer is not used.
§Examples
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared slice to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_ref
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or all of the following is true:
-
The pointer must be valid for reads for
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
many bytes, and it must be properly aligned. This means in particular:-
The entire memory range of this slice must be contained within a single allocated object! Slices can never span across multiple allocated objects.
-
The pointer must be aligned even for zero-length slices. One reason for this is that enum layout optimizations may rely on references (including slices of any length) being aligned and non-null to distinguish them from other data. You can obtain a pointer that is usable as
data
for zero-length slices usingNonNull::dangling()
.
-
-
The total size
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
of the slice must be no larger thanisize::MAX
. See the safety documentation ofpointer::offset
. -
You must enforce Rust’s aliasing rules, since the returned lifetime
'a
is arbitrarily chosen and does not necessarily reflect the actual lifetime of the data. In particular, while this reference exists, the memory the pointer points to must not get mutated (except insideUnsafeCell
).
This applies even if the result of this method is unused!
See also slice::from_raw_parts
.
Source§impl<T, const N: usize> *const [T; N]
impl<T, const N: usize> *const [T; N]
Sourcepub const fn as_ptr(self) -> *const T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (array_ptr_get
#119834)
pub const fn as_ptr(self) -> *const T
array_ptr_get
#119834)Returns a raw pointer to the array’s buffer.
This is equivalent to casting self
to *const T
, but more type-safe.
§Examples
Source§impl<T: ?Sized> *mut T
impl<T: ?Sized> *mut T
1.0.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn is_null(self) -> bool
pub fn is_null(self) -> bool
Returns true
if the pointer is null.
Note that unsized types have many possible null pointers, as only the raw data pointer is considered, not their length, vtable, etc. Therefore, two pointers that are null may still not compare equal to each other.
§Behavior during const evaluation
When this function is used during const evaluation, it may return false
for pointers
that turn out to be null at runtime. Specifically, when a pointer to some memory
is offset beyond its bounds in such a way that the resulting pointer is null,
the function will still return false
. There is no way for CTFE to know
the absolute position of that memory, so we cannot tell if the pointer is
null or not.
§Examples
1.38.0 (const: 1.38.0) · Sourcepub const fn cast<U>(self) -> *mut U
pub const fn cast<U>(self) -> *mut U
Casts to a pointer of another type.
Sourcepub const fn with_metadata_of<U>(self, meta: *const U) -> *mut Uwhere
U: ?Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (set_ptr_value
#75091)
pub const fn with_metadata_of<U>(self, meta: *const U) -> *mut Uwhere
U: ?Sized,
set_ptr_value
#75091)Uses the address value in a new pointer of another type.
This operation will ignore the address part of its meta
operand and discard existing
metadata of self
. For pointers to a sized types (thin pointers), this has the same effect
as a simple cast. For pointers to an unsized type (fat pointers) this recombines the address
with new metadata such as slice lengths or dyn
-vtable.
The resulting pointer will have provenance of self
. This operation is semantically the
same as creating a new pointer with the data pointer value of self
but the metadata of
meta
, being fat or thin depending on the meta
operand.
§Examples
This function is primarily useful for enabling pointer arithmetic on potentially fat pointers. The pointer is cast to a sized pointee to utilize offset operations and then recombined with its own original metadata.
#![feature(set_ptr_value)]
let mut arr: [i32; 3] = [1, 2, 3];
let mut ptr = arr.as_mut_ptr() as *mut dyn Debug;
let thin = ptr as *mut u8;
unsafe {
ptr = thin.add(8).with_metadata_of(ptr);
println!("{:?}", &*ptr); // will print "3"
}
§Incorrect usage
The provenance from pointers is not combined. The result must only be used to refer to the
address allowed by self
.
#![feature(set_ptr_value)]
let mut x = 0u32;
let mut y = 1u32;
let x = (&mut x) as *mut u32;
let y = (&mut y) as *mut u32;
let offset = (x as usize - y as usize) / 4;
let bad = x.wrapping_add(offset).with_metadata_of(y);
// This dereference is UB. The pointer only has provenance for `x` but points to `y`.
println!("{:?}", unsafe { &*bad });
1.65.0 (const: 1.65.0) · Sourcepub const fn cast_const(self) -> *const T
pub const fn cast_const(self) -> *const T
Changes constness without changing the type.
This is a bit safer than as
because it wouldn’t silently change the type if the code is
refactored.
While not strictly required (*mut T
coerces to *const T
), this is provided for symmetry
with cast_mut
on *const T
and may have documentation value if used instead of implicit
coercion.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn addr(self) -> usize
pub fn addr(self) -> usize
Gets the “address” portion of the pointer.
This is similar to self as usize
, except that the provenance of
the pointer is discarded and not exposed. This means that
casting the returned address back to a pointer yields a pointer without
provenance, which is undefined behavior to dereference. To properly
restore the lost information and obtain a dereferenceable pointer, use
with_addr
or map_addr
.
If using those APIs is not possible because there is no way to preserve a pointer with the
required provenance, then Strict Provenance might not be for you. Use pointer-integer casts
or expose_provenance
and with_exposed_provenance
instead. However, note that this makes your code less portable and less amenable to tools
that check for compliance with the Rust memory model.
On most platforms this will produce a value with the same bytes as the original pointer, because all the bytes are dedicated to describing the address. Platforms which need to store additional information in the pointer may perform a change of representation to produce a value containing only the address portion of the pointer. What that means is up to the platform to define.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn expose_provenance(self) -> usize
pub fn expose_provenance(self) -> usize
Exposes the “provenance” part of the pointer for future use in
with_exposed_provenance_mut
and returns the “address” portion.
This is equivalent to self as usize
, which semantically discards provenance information.
Furthermore, this (like the as
cast) has the implicit side-effect of marking the
provenance as ‘exposed’, so on platforms that support it you can later call
with_exposed_provenance_mut
to reconstitute the original pointer including its provenance.
Due to its inherent ambiguity, with_exposed_provenance_mut
may not be supported by tools
that help you to stay conformant with the Rust memory model. It is recommended to use
Strict Provenance APIs such as with_addr
wherever possible, in which case addr
should be used instead of expose_provenance
.
On most platforms this will produce a value with the same bytes as the original pointer,
because all the bytes are dedicated to describing the address. Platforms which need to store
additional information in the pointer may not support this operation, since the ‘expose’
side-effect which is required for with_exposed_provenance_mut
to work is typically not
available.
This is an Exposed Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn with_addr(self, addr: usize) -> Self
pub fn with_addr(self, addr: usize) -> Self
Creates a new pointer with the given address and the provenance of
self
.
This is similar to a addr as *mut T
cast, but copies
the provenance of self
to the new pointer.
This avoids the inherent ambiguity of the unary cast.
This is equivalent to using wrapping_offset
to offset
self
to the given address, and therefore has all the same capabilities and restrictions.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
1.84.0 · Sourcepub fn map_addr(self, f: impl FnOnce(usize) -> usize) -> Self
pub fn map_addr(self, f: impl FnOnce(usize) -> usize) -> Self
Creates a new pointer by mapping self
’s address to a new one, preserving the original
pointer’s provenance.
This is a convenience for with_addr
, see that method for details.
This is a Strict Provenance API.
Sourcepub const fn to_raw_parts(self) -> (*mut (), <T as Pointee>::Metadata)
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_metadata
#81513)
pub const fn to_raw_parts(self) -> (*mut (), <T as Pointee>::Metadata)
ptr_metadata
#81513)Decompose a (possibly wide) pointer into its data pointer and metadata components.
The pointer can be later reconstructed with from_raw_parts_mut
.
1.9.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>
pub unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a T>
Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. If the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_ref
must be used instead.
For the mutable counterpart see as_mut
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
let ptr: *mut u8 = &mut 10u8 as *mut u8;
unsafe {
if let Some(val_back) = ptr.as_ref() {
println!("We got back the value: {val_back}!");
}
}
§Null-unchecked version
If you are sure the pointer can never be null and are looking for some kind of
as_ref_unchecked
that returns the &T
instead of Option<&T>
, know that you can
dereference the pointer directly.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_ref_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)
pub const unsafe fn as_ref_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a T
ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)Returns a shared reference to the value behind the pointer.
If the pointer may be null or the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_ref
must be used instead.
If the pointer may be null, but the value is known to have been initialized, as_ref
must be used instead.
For the mutable counterpart see as_mut_unchecked
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_ref<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_ref
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
For the mutable counterpart see as_uninit_mut
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or
the pointer is convertible to a reference.
Note that because the created reference is to MaybeUninit<T>
, the
source pointer can point to uninitialized memory.
§Examples
1.0.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn offset(self, count: isize) -> *mut Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn offset(self, count: isize) -> *mut Twhere
T: Sized,
Adds a signed offset to a pointer.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_offset
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
Adds a signed offset in bytes to a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using offset on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.16.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_offset(self, count: isize) -> *mut Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_offset(self, count: isize) -> *mut Twhere
T: Sized,
Adds a signed offset to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_offset((y as isize) - (x as isize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to offset
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: offset
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_offset
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. offset
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_offset(o).wrapping_offset(o.wrapping_neg())
is always the same as x
. In other
words, leaving the allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements
let mut data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *mut u8 = data.as_mut_ptr();
let step = 2;
let end_rounded_up = ptr.wrapping_offset(6);
while ptr != end_rounded_up {
unsafe {
*ptr = 0;
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_offset(step);
}
assert_eq!(&data, &[0, 2, 0, 4, 0]);
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_offset(self, count: isize) -> Self
Adds a signed offset in bytes to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_offset on it. See that method
for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
Sourcepub fn mask(self, mask: usize) -> *mut T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_mask
#98290)
pub fn mask(self, mask: usize) -> *mut T
ptr_mask
#98290)Masks out bits of the pointer according to a mask.
This is convenience for ptr.map_addr(|a| a & mask)
.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
§Examples
#![feature(ptr_mask)]
let mut v = 17_u32;
let ptr: *mut u32 = &mut v;
// `u32` is 4 bytes aligned,
// which means that lower 2 bits are always 0.
let tag_mask = 0b11;
let ptr_mask = !tag_mask;
// We can store something in these lower bits
let tagged_ptr = ptr.map_addr(|a| a | 0b10);
// Get the "tag" back
let tag = tagged_ptr.addr() & tag_mask;
assert_eq!(tag, 0b10);
// Note that `tagged_ptr` is unaligned, it's UB to read from/write to it.
// To get original pointer `mask` can be used:
let masked_ptr = tagged_ptr.mask(ptr_mask);
assert_eq!(unsafe { *masked_ptr }, 17);
unsafe { *masked_ptr = 0 };
assert_eq!(v, 0);
1.9.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub unsafe fn as_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut T>
pub unsafe fn as_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut T>
Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a unique reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. If the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_mut
must be used instead.
For the shared counterpart see as_ref
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
let mut s = [1, 2, 3];
let ptr: *mut u32 = s.as_mut_ptr();
let first_value = unsafe { ptr.as_mut().unwrap() };
*first_value = 4;
println!("{s:?}"); // It'll print: "[4, 2, 3]".
§Null-unchecked version
If you are sure the pointer can never be null and are looking for some kind of
as_mut_unchecked
that returns the &mut T
instead of Option<&mut T>
, know that
you can dereference the pointer directly.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_mut_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a mut T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)
pub const unsafe fn as_mut_unchecked<'a>(self) -> &'a mut T
ptr_as_ref_unchecked
#122034)Returns a unique reference to the value behind the pointer.
If the pointer may be null or the value may be uninitialized, as_uninit_mut
must be used instead.
If the pointer may be null, but the value is known to have been initialized, as_mut
must be used instead.
For the shared counterpart see as_ref_unchecked
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that the pointer is convertible to a reference.
§Examples
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_mut<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a mut MaybeUninit<T>>where
T: Sized,
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a unique reference to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_mut
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
For the shared counterpart see as_uninit_ref
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or the pointer is convertible to a reference.
Sourcepub const fn guaranteed_eq(self, other: *mut T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)
pub const fn guaranteed_eq(self, other: *mut T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)Returns whether two pointers are guaranteed to be equal.
At runtime this function behaves like Some(self == other)
.
However, in some contexts (e.g., compile-time evaluation),
it is not always possible to determine equality of two pointers, so this function may
spuriously return None
for pointers that later actually turn out to have its equality known.
But when it returns Some
, the pointers’ equality is guaranteed to be known.
The return value may change from Some
to None
and vice versa depending on the compiler
version and unsafe code must not
rely on the result of this function for soundness. It is suggested to only use this function
for performance optimizations where spurious None
return values by this function do not
affect the outcome, but just the performance.
The consequences of using this method to make runtime and compile-time code behave
differently have not been explored. This method should not be used to introduce such
differences, and it should also not be stabilized before we have a better understanding
of this issue.
Sourcepub const fn guaranteed_ne(self, other: *mut T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)
pub const fn guaranteed_ne(self, other: *mut T) -> Option<bool>where
T: Sized,
const_raw_ptr_comparison
#53020)Returns whether two pointers are guaranteed to be inequal.
At runtime this function behaves like Some(self != other)
.
However, in some contexts (e.g., compile-time evaluation),
it is not always possible to determine inequality of two pointers, so this function may
spuriously return None
for pointers that later actually turn out to have its inequality known.
But when it returns Some
, the pointers’ inequality is guaranteed to be known.
The return value may change from Some
to None
and vice versa depending on the compiler
version and unsafe code must not
rely on the result of this function for soundness. It is suggested to only use this function
for performance optimizations where spurious None
return values by this function do not
affect the outcome, but just the performance.
The consequences of using this method to make runtime and compile-time code behave
differently have not been explored. This method should not be used to introduce such
differences, and it should also not be stabilized before we have a better understanding
of this issue.
1.47.0 (const: 1.65.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn offset_from(self, origin: *const T) -> isizewhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn offset_from(self, origin: *const T) -> isizewhere
T: Sized,
Calculates the distance between two pointers. The returned value is in
units of T: the distance in bytes divided by mem::size_of::<T>()
.
This is equivalent to (self as isize - origin as isize) / (mem::size_of::<T>() as isize)
,
except that it has a lot more opportunities for UB, in exchange for the compiler
better understanding what you are doing.
The primary motivation of this method is for computing the len
of an array/slice
of T
that you are currently representing as a “start” and “end” pointer
(and “end” is “one past the end” of the array).
In that case, end.offset_from(start)
gets you the length of the array.
All of the following safety requirements are trivially satisfied for this usecase.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
self
andorigin
must either- point to the same address, or
- both be derived from a pointer to the same allocated object, and the memory range between the two pointers must be in bounds of that object. (See below for an example.)
-
The distance between the pointers, in bytes, must be an exact multiple of the size of
T
.
As a consequence, the absolute distance between the pointers, in bytes, computed on
mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), cannot overflow an isize
. This is
implied by the in-bounds requirement, and the fact that no allocated object can be larger
than isize::MAX
bytes.
The requirement for pointers to be derived from the same allocated object is primarily
needed for const
-compatibility: the distance between pointers into different allocated
objects is not known at compile-time. However, the requirement also exists at
runtime and may be exploited by optimizations. If you wish to compute the difference between
pointers that are not guaranteed to be from the same allocation, use (self as isize - origin as isize) / mem::size_of::<T>()
.
§Panics
This function panics if T
is a Zero-Sized Type (“ZST”).
§Examples
Basic usage:
let mut a = [0; 5];
let ptr1: *mut i32 = &mut a[1];
let ptr2: *mut i32 = &mut a[3];
unsafe {
assert_eq!(ptr2.offset_from(ptr1), 2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.offset_from(ptr2), -2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.offset(2), ptr2);
assert_eq!(ptr2.offset(-2), ptr1);
}
Incorrect usage:
let ptr1 = Box::into_raw(Box::new(0u8));
let ptr2 = Box::into_raw(Box::new(1u8));
let diff = (ptr2 as isize).wrapping_sub(ptr1 as isize);
// Make ptr2_other an "alias" of ptr2.add(1), but derived from ptr1.
let ptr2_other = (ptr1 as *mut u8).wrapping_offset(diff).wrapping_offset(1);
assert_eq!(ptr2 as usize, ptr2_other as usize);
// Since ptr2_other and ptr2 are derived from pointers to different objects,
// computing their offset is undefined behavior, even though
// they point to addresses that are in-bounds of the same object!
unsafe {
let one = ptr2_other.offset_from(ptr2); // Undefined Behavior! ⚠️
}
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_offset_from<U: ?Sized>(self, origin: *const U) -> isize
pub const unsafe fn byte_offset_from<U: ?Sized>(self, origin: *const U) -> isize
Calculates the distance between two pointers. The returned value is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using offset_from
on it. See that method for
documentation and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation considers only the data pointers,
ignoring the metadata.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn sub_ptr(self, origin: *const T) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_sub_ptr
#95892)
pub const unsafe fn sub_ptr(self, origin: *const T) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
ptr_sub_ptr
#95892)Calculates the distance between two pointers, where it’s known that
self
is equal to or greater than origin
. The returned value is in
units of T: the distance in bytes is divided by mem::size_of::<T>()
.
This computes the same value that offset_from
would compute, but with the added precondition that the offset is
guaranteed to be non-negative. This method is equivalent to
usize::try_from(self.offset_from(origin)).unwrap_unchecked()
,
but it provides slightly more information to the optimizer, which can
sometimes allow it to optimize slightly better with some backends.
This method can be thought of as recovering the count
that was passed
to add
(or, with the parameters in the other order,
to sub
). The following are all equivalent, assuming
that their safety preconditions are met:
§Safety
-
The distance between the pointers must be non-negative (
self >= origin
) -
All the safety conditions of
offset_from
apply to this method as well; see it for the full details.
Importantly, despite the return type of this method being able to represent
a larger offset, it’s still not permitted to pass pointers which differ
by more than isize::MAX
bytes. As such, the result of this method will
always be less than or equal to isize::MAX as usize
.
§Panics
This function panics if T
is a Zero-Sized Type (“ZST”).
§Examples
#![feature(ptr_sub_ptr)]
let mut a = [0; 5];
let p: *mut i32 = a.as_mut_ptr();
unsafe {
let ptr1: *mut i32 = p.add(1);
let ptr2: *mut i32 = p.add(3);
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub_ptr(ptr1), 2);
assert_eq!(ptr1.add(2), ptr2);
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub(2), ptr1);
assert_eq!(ptr2.sub_ptr(ptr2), 0);
}
// This would be incorrect, as the pointers are not correctly ordered:
// ptr1.offset_from(ptr2)
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Adds an unsigned offset to a pointer.
This can only move the pointer forward (or not move it). If you need to move forward or
backward depending on the value, then you might want offset
instead
which takes a signed offset.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_add
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
Adds an unsigned offset in bytes to a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using add on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Subtracts an unsigned offset from a pointer.
This can only move the pointer backward (or not move it). If you need to move forward or
backward depending on the value, then you might want offset
instead
which takes a signed offset.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
If any of the following conditions are violated, the result is Undefined Behavior:
-
The offset in bytes,
count * size_of::<T>()
, computed on mathematical integers (without “wrapping around”), must fit in anisize
. -
If the computed offset is non-zero, then
self
must be derived from a pointer to some allocated object, and the entire memory range betweenself
and the result must be in bounds of that allocated object. In particular, this range must not “wrap around” the edge of the address space.
Allocated objects can never be larger than isize::MAX
bytes, so if the computed offset
stays in bounds of the allocated object, it is guaranteed to satisfy the first requirement.
This implies, for instance, that vec.as_ptr().add(vec.len())
(for vec: Vec<T>
) is always
safe.
Consider using wrapping_sub
instead if these constraints are
difficult to satisfy. The only advantage of this method is that it
enables more aggressive compiler optimizations.
§Examples
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const unsafe fn byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
Subtracts an unsigned offset in bytes from a pointer.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using sub on it. See that method for documentation
and safety requirements.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_add(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Adds an unsigned offset to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_add((y as usize) - (x as usize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to add
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: add
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_add
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. add
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_add(o).wrapping_sub(o)
is always the same as x
. In other words, leaving the
allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements
let data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *const u8 = data.as_ptr();
let step = 2;
let end_rounded_up = ptr.wrapping_add(6);
// This loop prints "1, 3, 5, "
while ptr != end_rounded_up {
unsafe {
print!("{}, ", *ptr);
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_add(step);
}
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_add(self, count: usize) -> Self
Adds an unsigned offset in bytes to a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_add on it. See that method for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.61.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
pub const fn wrapping_sub(self, count: usize) -> Selfwhere
T: Sized,
Subtracts an unsigned offset from a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of T; e.g., a count
of 3 represents a pointer
offset of 3 * size_of::<T>()
bytes.
§Safety
This operation itself is always safe, but using the resulting pointer is not.
The resulting pointer “remembers” the allocated object that self
points to; it must not
be used to read or write other allocated objects.
In other words, let z = x.wrapping_sub((x as usize) - (y as usize))
does not make z
the same as y
even if we assume T
has size 1
and there is no overflow: z
is still
attached to the object x
is attached to, and dereferencing it is Undefined Behavior unless
x
and y
point into the same allocated object.
Compared to sub
, this method basically delays the requirement of staying within the
same allocated object: sub
is immediate Undefined Behavior when crossing object
boundaries; wrapping_sub
produces a pointer but still leads to Undefined Behavior if a
pointer is dereferenced when it is out-of-bounds of the object it is attached to. sub
can be optimized better and is thus preferable in performance-sensitive code.
The delayed check only considers the value of the pointer that was dereferenced, not the
intermediate values used during the computation of the final result. For example,
x.wrapping_add(o).wrapping_sub(o)
is always the same as x
. In other words, leaving the
allocated object and then re-entering it later is permitted.
§Examples
// Iterate using a raw pointer in increments of two elements (backwards)
let data = [1u8, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let mut ptr: *const u8 = data.as_ptr();
let start_rounded_down = ptr.wrapping_sub(2);
ptr = ptr.wrapping_add(4);
let step = 2;
// This loop prints "5, 3, 1, "
while ptr != start_rounded_down {
unsafe {
print!("{}, ", *ptr);
}
ptr = ptr.wrapping_sub(step);
}
1.75.0 (const: 1.75.0) · Sourcepub const fn wrapping_byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
pub const fn wrapping_byte_sub(self, count: usize) -> Self
Subtracts an unsigned offset in bytes from a pointer using wrapping arithmetic.
count
is in units of bytes.
This is purely a convenience for casting to a u8
pointer and
using wrapping_sub on it. See that method for documentation.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation changes only the data pointer,
leaving the metadata untouched.
1.26.0 (const: 1.71.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn read(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn read(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Reads the value from self
without moving it. This leaves the
memory in self
unchanged.
See ptr::read
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 · Sourcepub unsafe fn read_volatile(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub unsafe fn read_volatile(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Performs a volatile read of the value from self
without moving it. This
leaves the memory in self
unchanged.
Volatile operations are intended to act on I/O memory, and are guaranteed to not be elided or reordered by the compiler across other volatile operations.
See ptr::read_volatile
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.71.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn read_unaligned(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn read_unaligned(self) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Reads the value from self
without moving it. This leaves the
memory in self
unchanged.
Unlike read
, the pointer may be unaligned.
See ptr::read_unaligned
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_to(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_to(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_to_nonoverlapping(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_to_nonoverlapping(self, dest: *mut T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
Copies count * size_of<T>
bytes from self
to dest
. The source
and destination may not overlap.
NOTE: this has the same argument order as ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
.
See ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_from(self, src: *const T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_from(self, src: *const T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn copy_from_nonoverlapping(self, src: *const T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn copy_from_nonoverlapping(self, src: *const T, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
Copies count * size_of<T>
bytes from src
to self
. The source
and destination may not overlap.
NOTE: this has the opposite argument order of ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
.
See ptr::copy_nonoverlapping
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 · Sourcepub unsafe fn drop_in_place(self)
pub unsafe fn drop_in_place(self)
Executes the destructor (if any) of the pointed-to value.
See ptr::drop_in_place
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn write(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn write(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
Overwrites a memory location with the given value without reading or dropping the old value.
See ptr::write
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn write_bytes(self, val: u8, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn write_bytes(self, val: u8, count: usize)where
T: Sized,
Invokes memset on the specified pointer, setting count * size_of::<T>()
bytes of memory starting at self
to val
.
See ptr::write_bytes
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 · Sourcepub unsafe fn write_volatile(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
pub unsafe fn write_volatile(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
Performs a volatile write of a memory location with the given value without reading or dropping the old value.
Volatile operations are intended to act on I/O memory, and are guaranteed to not be elided or reordered by the compiler across other volatile operations.
See ptr::write_volatile
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: 1.83.0) · Sourcepub const unsafe fn write_unaligned(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
pub const unsafe fn write_unaligned(self, val: T)where
T: Sized,
Overwrites a memory location with the given value without reading or dropping the old value.
Unlike write
, the pointer may be unaligned.
See ptr::write_unaligned
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 · Sourcepub unsafe fn replace(self, src: T) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
pub unsafe fn replace(self, src: T) -> Twhere
T: Sized,
Replaces the value at self
with src
, returning the old
value, without dropping either.
See ptr::replace
for safety concerns and examples.
1.26.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub unsafe fn swap(self, with: *mut T)where
T: Sized,
pub unsafe fn swap(self, with: *mut T)where
T: Sized,
Swaps the values at two mutable locations of the same type, without
deinitializing either. They may overlap, unlike mem::swap
which is
otherwise equivalent.
See ptr::swap
for safety concerns and examples.
1.36.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn align_offset(self, align: usize) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
pub fn align_offset(self, align: usize) -> usizewhere
T: Sized,
Computes the offset that needs to be applied to the pointer in order to make it aligned to
align
.
If it is not possible to align the pointer, the implementation returns
usize::MAX
.
The offset is expressed in number of T
elements, and not bytes. The value returned can be
used with the wrapping_add
method.
There are no guarantees whatsoever that offsetting the pointer will not overflow or go beyond the allocation that the pointer points into. It is up to the caller to ensure that the returned offset is correct in all terms other than alignment.
When this is called during compile-time evaluation (which is unstable), the implementation
may return usize::MAX
in cases where that can never happen at runtime. This is because the
actual alignment of pointers is not known yet during compile-time, so an offset with
guaranteed alignment can sometimes not be computed. For example, a buffer declared as [u8; N]
might be allocated at an odd or an even address, but at compile-time this is not yet
known, so the execution has to be correct for either choice. It is therefore impossible to
find an offset that is guaranteed to be 2-aligned. (This behavior is subject to change, as usual
for unstable APIs.)
§Panics
The function panics if align
is not a power-of-two.
§Examples
Accessing adjacent u8
as u16
use std::mem::align_of;
let mut x = [5_u8, 6, 7, 8, 9];
let ptr = x.as_mut_ptr();
let offset = ptr.align_offset(align_of::<u16>());
if offset < x.len() - 1 {
let u16_ptr = ptr.add(offset).cast::<u16>();
*u16_ptr = 0;
assert!(x == [0, 0, 7, 8, 9] || x == [5, 0, 0, 8, 9]);
} else {
// while the pointer can be aligned via `offset`, it would point
// outside the allocation
}
1.79.0 (const: unstable) · Sourcepub fn is_aligned(self) -> boolwhere
T: Sized,
pub fn is_aligned(self) -> boolwhere
T: Sized,
Returns whether the pointer is properly aligned for T
.
§Examples
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
let mut data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &mut data as *mut AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_byte_add(1).is_aligned());
§At compiletime
Note: Alignment at compiletime is experimental and subject to change. See the tracking issue for details.
At compiletime, the compiler may not know where a value will end up in memory.
Calling this function on a pointer created from a reference at compiletime will only
return true
if the pointer is guaranteed to be aligned. This means that the pointer
is never aligned if cast to a type with a stricter alignment than the reference’s
underlying allocation.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
const _: () = {
let mut data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &mut data as *mut AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
// At runtime either `ptr1` or `ptr2` would be aligned, but at compiletime neither is aligned.
let ptr1 = ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>();
let ptr2 = ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>();
assert!(!ptr1.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr2.is_aligned());
};
Due to this behavior, it is possible that a runtime pointer derived from a compiletime pointer is aligned, even if the compiletime pointer wasn’t aligned.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
// At compiletime, neither `COMPTIME_PTR` nor `COMPTIME_PTR + 1` is aligned.
// Also, note that mutable references are not allowed in the final value of constants.
const COMPTIME_PTR: *mut AlignedI32 = (&AlignedI32(42) as *const AlignedI32).cast_mut();
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned());
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned());
// At runtime, either `runtime_ptr` or `runtime_ptr + 1` is aligned.
let runtime_ptr = COMPTIME_PTR;
assert_ne!(
runtime_ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned(),
runtime_ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>().is_aligned(),
);
If a pointer is created from a fixed address, this function behaves the same during runtime and compiletime.
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of primitives is less than their size.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
#[repr(align(8))]
struct AlignedI64(i64);
const _: () = {
let ptr = 40 as *mut AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned());
// For pointers with a known address, runtime and compiletime behavior are identical.
let ptr1 = ptr.cast::<AlignedI64>();
let ptr2 = ptr.wrapping_add(1).cast::<AlignedI64>();
assert!(ptr1.is_aligned());
assert!(!ptr2.is_aligned());
};
Sourcepub const fn is_aligned_to(self, align: usize) -> bool
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (pointer_is_aligned_to
#96284)
pub const fn is_aligned_to(self, align: usize) -> bool
pointer_is_aligned_to
#96284)Returns whether the pointer is aligned to align
.
For non-Sized
pointees this operation considers only the data pointer,
ignoring the metadata.
§Panics
The function panics if align
is not a power-of-two (this includes 0).
§Examples
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
let mut data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &mut data as *mut AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(1));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(4));
assert!(ptr.wrapping_byte_add(2).is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_byte_add(2).is_aligned_to(4));
assert_ne!(ptr.is_aligned_to(8), ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
§At compiletime
Note: Alignment at compiletime is experimental and subject to change. See the tracking issue for details.
At compiletime, the compiler may not know where a value will end up in memory.
Calling this function on a pointer created from a reference at compiletime will only
return true
if the pointer is guaranteed to be aligned. This means that the pointer
cannot be stricter aligned than the reference’s underlying allocation.
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
const _: () = {
let mut data = AlignedI32(42);
let ptr = &mut data as *mut AlignedI32;
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(1));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(2));
assert!(ptr.is_aligned_to(4));
// At compiletime, we know for sure that the pointer isn't aligned to 8.
assert!(!ptr.is_aligned_to(8));
assert!(!ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
};
Due to this behavior, it is possible that a runtime pointer derived from a compiletime pointer is aligned, even if the compiletime pointer wasn’t aligned.
#![feature(pointer_is_aligned_to)]
#![feature(const_pointer_is_aligned)]
// On some platforms, the alignment of i32 is less than 4.
#[repr(align(4))]
struct AlignedI32(i32);
// At compiletime, neither `COMPTIME_PTR` nor `COMPTIME_PTR + 1` is aligned.
// Also, note that mutable references are not allowed in the final value of constants.
const COMPTIME_PTR: *mut AlignedI32 = (&AlignedI32(42) as *const AlignedI32).cast_mut();
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.is_aligned_to(8));
const _: () = assert!(!COMPTIME_PTR.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8));
// At runtime, either `runtime_ptr` or `runtime_ptr + 1` is aligned.
let runtime_ptr = COMPTIME_PTR;
assert_ne!(
runtime_ptr.is_aligned_to(8),
runtime_ptr.wrapping_add(1).is_aligned_to(8),
);
If a pointer is created from a fixed address, this function behaves the same during runtime and compiletime.
Source§impl<T> *mut [T]
impl<T> *mut [T]
1.79.0 (const: 1.79.0) · Sourcepub const fn len(self) -> usize
pub const fn len(self) -> usize
Returns the length of a raw slice.
The returned value is the number of elements, not the number of bytes.
This function is safe, even when the raw slice cannot be cast to a slice reference because the pointer is null or unaligned.
§Examples
1.79.0 (const: 1.79.0) · Sourcepub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool
pub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool
Returns true
if the raw slice has a length of 0.
§Examples
Sourcepub unsafe fn split_at_mut(self, mid: usize) -> (*mut [T], *mut [T])
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (raw_slice_split
#95595)
pub unsafe fn split_at_mut(self, mid: usize) -> (*mut [T], *mut [T])
raw_slice_split
#95595)Divides one mutable raw slice into two at an index.
The first will contain all indices from [0, mid)
(excluding
the index mid
itself) and the second will contain all
indices from [mid, len)
(excluding the index len
itself).
§Panics
Panics if mid > len
.
§Safety
mid
must be in-bounds of the underlying allocated object.
Which means self
must be dereferenceable and span a single allocation
that is at least mid * size_of::<T>()
bytes long. Not upholding these
requirements is undefined behavior even if the resulting pointers are not used.
Since len
being in-bounds it is not a safety invariant of *mut [T]
the
safety requirements of this method are the same as for split_at_mut_unchecked
.
The explicit bounds check is only as useful as len
is correct.
§Examples
Sourcepub unsafe fn split_at_mut_unchecked(self, mid: usize) -> (*mut [T], *mut [T])
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (raw_slice_split
#95595)
pub unsafe fn split_at_mut_unchecked(self, mid: usize) -> (*mut [T], *mut [T])
raw_slice_split
#95595)Divides one mutable raw slice into two at an index, without doing bounds checking.
The first will contain all indices from [0, mid)
(excluding
the index mid
itself) and the second will contain all
indices from [mid, len)
(excluding the index len
itself).
§Safety
mid
must be in-bounds of the underlying [allocated object].
Which means self
must be dereferenceable and span a single allocation
that is at least mid * size_of::<T>()
bytes long. Not upholding these
requirements is undefined behavior even if the resulting pointers are not used.
§Examples
#![feature(raw_slice_split)]
let mut v = [1, 0, 3, 0, 5, 6];
// scoped to restrict the lifetime of the borrows
unsafe {
let ptr = &mut v as *mut [_];
let (left, right) = ptr.split_at_mut_unchecked(2);
assert_eq!(&*left, [1, 0]);
assert_eq!(&*right, [3, 0, 5, 6]);
(&mut *left)[1] = 2;
(&mut *right)[1] = 4;
}
assert_eq!(v, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
Sourcepub const fn as_mut_ptr(self) -> *mut T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (slice_ptr_get
#74265)
pub const fn as_mut_ptr(self) -> *mut T
slice_ptr_get
#74265)Returns a raw pointer to the slice’s buffer.
This is equivalent to casting self
to *mut T
, but more type-safe.
§Examples
Sourcepub unsafe fn get_unchecked_mut<I>(self, index: I) -> *mut I::Outputwhere
I: SliceIndex<[T]>,
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (slice_ptr_get
#74265)
pub unsafe fn get_unchecked_mut<I>(self, index: I) -> *mut I::Outputwhere
I: SliceIndex<[T]>,
slice_ptr_get
#74265)Returns a raw pointer to an element or subslice, without doing bounds checking.
Calling this method with an out-of-bounds index or when self
is not dereferenceable
is undefined behavior even if the resulting pointer is not used.
§Examples
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice<'a>(self) -> Option<&'a [MaybeUninit<T>]>
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a shared slice to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_ref
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
For the mutable counterpart see as_uninit_slice_mut
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or all of the following is true:
-
The pointer must be valid for reads for
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
many bytes, and it must be properly aligned. This means in particular:-
The entire memory range of this slice must be contained within a single allocated object! Slices can never span across multiple allocated objects.
-
The pointer must be aligned even for zero-length slices. One reason for this is that enum layout optimizations may rely on references (including slices of any length) being aligned and non-null to distinguish them from other data. You can obtain a pointer that is usable as
data
for zero-length slices usingNonNull::dangling()
.
-
-
The total size
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
of the slice must be no larger thanisize::MAX
. See the safety documentation ofpointer::offset
. -
You must enforce Rust’s aliasing rules, since the returned lifetime
'a
is arbitrarily chosen and does not necessarily reflect the actual lifetime of the data. In particular, while this reference exists, the memory the pointer points to must not get mutated (except insideUnsafeCell
).
This applies even if the result of this method is unused!
See also slice::from_raw_parts
.
Sourcepub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice_mut<'a>(
self,
) -> Option<&'a mut [MaybeUninit<T>]>
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (ptr_as_uninit
#75402)
pub const unsafe fn as_uninit_slice_mut<'a>( self, ) -> Option<&'a mut [MaybeUninit<T>]>
ptr_as_uninit
#75402)Returns None
if the pointer is null, or else returns a unique slice to
the value wrapped in Some
. In contrast to as_mut
, this does not require
that the value has to be initialized.
For the shared counterpart see as_uninit_slice
.
§Safety
When calling this method, you have to ensure that either the pointer is null or all of the following is true:
-
The pointer must be valid for reads and writes for
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
many bytes, and it must be properly aligned. This means in particular:-
The entire memory range of this slice must be contained within a single allocated object! Slices can never span across multiple allocated objects.
-
The pointer must be aligned even for zero-length slices. One reason for this is that enum layout optimizations may rely on references (including slices of any length) being aligned and non-null to distinguish them from other data. You can obtain a pointer that is usable as
data
for zero-length slices usingNonNull::dangling()
.
-
-
The total size
ptr.len() * mem::size_of::<T>()
of the slice must be no larger thanisize::MAX
. See the safety documentation ofpointer::offset
. -
You must enforce Rust’s aliasing rules, since the returned lifetime
'a
is arbitrarily chosen and does not necessarily reflect the actual lifetime of the data. In particular, while this reference exists, the memory the pointer points to must not get accessed (read or written) through any other pointer.
This applies even if the result of this method is unused!
See also slice::from_raw_parts_mut
.
Source§impl<T, const N: usize> *mut [T; N]
impl<T, const N: usize> *mut [T; N]
Sourcepub const fn as_mut_ptr(self) -> *mut T
🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (array_ptr_get
#119834)
pub const fn as_mut_ptr(self) -> *mut T
array_ptr_get
#119834)Returns a raw pointer to the array’s buffer.
This is equivalent to casting self
to *mut T
, but more type-safe.