Function std::mem::needs_drop
1.21.0 (const: 1.36.0) · source · Expand description
Returns true
if dropping values of type T
matters.
This is purely an optimization hint, and may be implemented conservatively:
it may return true
for types that don’t actually need to be dropped.
As such always returning true
would be a valid implementation of
this function. However if this function actually returns false
, then you
can be certain dropping T
has no side effect.
Low level implementations of things like collections, which need to manually drop their data, should use this function to avoid unnecessarily trying to drop all their contents when they are destroyed. This might not make a difference in release builds (where a loop that has no side-effects is easily detected and eliminated), but is often a big win for debug builds.
Note that drop_in_place
already performs this check, so if your workload
can be reduced to some small number of drop_in_place
calls, using this is
unnecessary. In particular note that you can drop_in_place
a slice, and that
will do a single needs_drop check for all the values.
Types like Vec therefore just drop_in_place(&mut self[..])
without using
needs_drop
explicitly. Types like HashMap
, on the other hand, have to drop
values one at a time and should use this API.
Examples
Here’s an example of how a collection might make use of needs_drop
:
use std::{mem, ptr};
pub struct MyCollection<T> {
/* ... */
}
impl<T> Drop for MyCollection<T> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
unsafe {
// drop the data
if mem::needs_drop::<T>() {
for x in self.iter_mut() {
ptr::drop_in_place(x);
}
}
self.free_buffer();
}
}
}
Run