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use crate::loom::cell::UnsafeCell; use std::rc::Rc; /// This is exactly like `Cell<Option<Rc<T>>>`, except that it provides a `get` /// method even though `Rc` is not `Copy`. pub(crate) struct RcCell<T> { inner: UnsafeCell<Option<Rc<T>>>, } impl<T> RcCell<T> { #[cfg(not(all(loom, test)))] pub(crate) const fn new() -> Self { Self { inner: UnsafeCell::new(None), } } // The UnsafeCell in loom does not have a const `new` fn. #[cfg(all(loom, test))] pub(crate) fn new() -> Self { Self { inner: UnsafeCell::new(None), } } /// Safety: This method may not be called recursively. #[inline] unsafe fn with_inner<F, R>(&self, f: F) -> R where F: FnOnce(&mut Option<Rc<T>>) -> R, { // safety: This type is not Sync, so concurrent calls of this method // cannot happen. Furthermore, the caller guarantees that the method is // not called recursively. Finally, this is the only place that can // create mutable references to the inner Rc. This ensures that any // mutable references created here are exclusive. self.inner.with_mut(|ptr| f(&mut *ptr)) } pub(crate) fn get(&self) -> Option<Rc<T>> { // safety: The `Rc::clone` method will not call any unknown user-code, // so it will not result in a recursive call to `with_inner`. unsafe { self.with_inner(|rc| rc.clone()) } } pub(crate) fn replace(&self, val: Option<Rc<T>>) -> Option<Rc<T>> { // safety: No destructors or other unknown user-code will run inside the // `with_inner` call, so no recursive call to `with_inner` can happen. unsafe { self.with_inner(|rc| std::mem::replace(rc, val)) } } pub(crate) fn set(&self, val: Option<Rc<T>>) { let old = self.replace(val); drop(old); } }
Version data entries
38 entries across 38 versions & 1 rubygems