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// Copyright 2016-2019 bluss and rawpointer developers.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
#![no_std]
//! Rawpointer adds extra utility methods to raw pointers `*const T`, `*mut T`
//! and `NonNull<T>`.
//!
//! Features include:
//!
//! - Strided offsets - [`.stride_offset(stride,
//! index)`](PointerExt::stride_offset) make it easy to compute
//! pointer offsets where the index is unsigned and the stride is signed.
//!
//! - Offsetting methods in general for `NonNull`, since it does not have these
//! from libcore
//!
//! - Post- and preincrement and post- and predecrement methods
//!
//! - For `p++` use [`p.post_inc()`](PointerExt::post_inc).
//! - For `++p` use [`p.pre_inc()`](PointerExt::pre_inc).
//! - For `p--` use [`p.post_dec()`](PointerExt::post_dec).
//! - For `--p` use [`p.pre_dec()`](PointerExt::pre_dec).
//!
//! ```rust
//! use rawpointer::PointerExt;
//!
//! unsafe {
//! // In this example:
//! // Use .post_inc() to iterate and overwrite the first four
//! // elements of the array.
//!
//! let mut xs = [0; 16];
//! let mut ptr = xs.as_mut_ptr();
//! let end = ptr.offset(4);
//! let mut i = 0;
//! while ptr != end {
//! *ptr.post_inc() = i;
//! i += 1;
//! }
//! assert_eq!(&xs[..8], &[0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 0, 0, 0]);
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! ## Safety
//!
//! See the Rust [core::ptr] documentation for more information.
//!
//! ## Rust Version
//!
//! This version of the crate requires Rust 1.26 or later
use core::mem::size_of;
use core::ptr::NonNull;
/// Return the number of elements of `T` from `start` to `end`.<br>
/// Return the arithmetic difference if `T` is zero size.
#[inline(always)]
pub fn ptrdistance<T>(start: *const T, end: *const T) -> usize {
let size = size_of::<T>();
if size == 0 {
(end as usize).wrapping_sub(start as usize)
} else {
(end as usize - start as usize) / size
}
}
/// Extension methods for raw pointers
pub trait PointerExt : Copy {
unsafe fn offset(self, i: isize) -> Self;
unsafe fn add(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.offset(i as isize)
}
unsafe fn sub(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.offset((i as isize).wrapping_neg())
}
/// Increment the pointer by 1, and return its new value.
///
/// Equivalent to the C idiom `++ptr`.
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn pre_inc(&mut self) -> Self {
*self = self.offset(1);
*self
}
/// Increment the pointer by 1, but return its old value.
///
/// Equivalent to the C idiom `ptr++`.
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn post_inc(&mut self) -> Self {
let current = *self;
*self = self.offset(1);
current
}
/// Decrement the pointer by 1, and return its new value.
///
/// Equivalent to the C idiom `--ptr`.
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn pre_dec(&mut self) -> Self {
*self = self.offset(-1);
*self
}
/// Decrement the pointer by 1, but return its old value.
///
/// Equivalent to the C idiom `ptr--`.
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn post_dec(&mut self) -> Self {
let current = *self;
*self = self.offset(-1);
current
}
/// Increment by 1
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn inc(&mut self) {
*self = self.offset(1);
}
/// Decrement by 1
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn dec(&mut self) {
*self = self.offset(-1);
}
/// Offset the pointer by `s` multiplied by `index`.
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn stride_offset(self, s: isize, index: usize) -> Self {
self.offset(s * index as isize)
}
}
impl<T> PointerExt for *const T {
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn offset(self, i: isize) -> Self {
self.offset(i)
}
// Call inherent version of add/sub
#[inline]
unsafe fn add(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.add(i)
}
#[inline]
unsafe fn sub(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.sub(i)
}
}
impl<T> PointerExt for *mut T {
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn offset(self, i: isize) -> Self {
self.offset(i)
}
#[inline]
unsafe fn add(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.add(i)
}
#[inline]
unsafe fn sub(self, i: usize) -> Self {
self.sub(i)
}
}
/// `NonNull<T>` supports the same offsetting methods under the same
/// safety constraints as the other raw pointer implementations.
///
/// There is no difference - both when offsetting `*mut T` and `NonNull<T>`,
/// the offset is only well defined if we remain inside the same object or
/// one-past the end, and we can never land in a null pointer while obeying
/// those rules.
impl<T> PointerExt for NonNull<T> {
#[inline(always)]
unsafe fn offset(self, i: isize) -> Self {
NonNull::new_unchecked(self.as_ptr().offset(i))
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::PointerExt;
use core::ptr::NonNull;
#[test]
fn it_works() {
unsafe {
let mut xs = [0; 16];
let mut ptr = xs.as_mut_ptr();
let end = ptr.offset(4);
let mut i = 0;
while ptr != end {
*ptr.post_inc() = i;
i += 1;
}
assert_eq!(&xs[..8], &[0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 0, 0, 0]);
}
}
#[test]
fn nonnull() {
unsafe {
let mut xs = [0; 16];
let mut ptr = NonNull::new(xs.as_mut_ptr()).unwrap();
let end = ptr.offset(4);
let mut i = 0;
while ptr != end {
*ptr.post_inc().as_ptr() = i;
i += 1;
}
assert_eq!(&xs[..8], &[0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 0, 0, 0]);
}
}
#[test]
fn nonnull_sub() {
unsafe {
// Test NonNull<T> .sub(1) iteration and equivalence to *mut T
let mut xs = [0; 16];
let mut ptr = xs.as_mut_ptr().add(xs.len());
let nptr = NonNull::new(xs.as_mut_ptr()).unwrap();
let mut nend = nptr.add(xs.len());
let mut i = 0;
while nptr != nend {
nend = nend.sub(1);
ptr = ptr.sub(1);
assert_eq!(nend.as_ptr(), ptr);
*nend.as_ptr() = i;
i += 1;
}
assert_eq!(&xs[..8], &[15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8]);
}
}
}