rust/compiler/rustc_borrowck/src/place_ext.rs
2024-02-16 15:07:37 +00:00

72 lines
3.1 KiB
Rust

use crate::borrow_set::LocalsStateAtExit;
use rustc_hir as hir;
use rustc_macros::extension;
use rustc_middle::mir::ProjectionElem;
use rustc_middle::mir::{Body, Mutability, Place};
use rustc_middle::ty::{self, TyCtxt};
#[extension(pub trait PlaceExt<'tcx>)]
impl<'tcx> Place<'tcx> {
/// Returns `true` if we can safely ignore borrows of this place.
/// This is true whenever there is no action that the user can do
/// to the place `self` that would invalidate the borrow. This is true
/// for borrows of raw pointer dereferents as well as shared references.
fn ignore_borrow(
&self,
tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>,
body: &Body<'tcx>,
locals_state_at_exit: &LocalsStateAtExit,
) -> bool {
// If a local variable is immutable, then we only need to track borrows to guard
// against two kinds of errors:
// * The variable being dropped while still borrowed (e.g., because the fn returns
// a reference to a local variable)
// * The variable being moved while still borrowed
//
// In particular, the variable cannot be mutated -- the "access checks" will fail --
// so we don't have to worry about mutation while borrowed.
if let LocalsStateAtExit::SomeAreInvalidated { has_storage_dead_or_moved } =
locals_state_at_exit
{
let ignore = !has_storage_dead_or_moved.contains(self.local)
&& body.local_decls[self.local].mutability == Mutability::Not;
debug!("ignore_borrow: local {:?} => {:?}", self.local, ignore);
if ignore {
return true;
}
}
for (i, (proj_base, elem)) in self.iter_projections().enumerate() {
if elem == ProjectionElem::Deref {
let ty = proj_base.ty(body, tcx).ty;
match ty.kind() {
ty::Ref(_, _, hir::Mutability::Not) if i == 0 => {
// For references to thread-local statics, we do need
// to track the borrow.
if body.local_decls[self.local].is_ref_to_thread_local() {
continue;
}
return true;
}
ty::RawPtr(..) | ty::Ref(_, _, hir::Mutability::Not) => {
// For both derefs of raw pointers and `&T`
// references, the original path is `Copy` and
// therefore not significant. In particular,
// there is nothing the user can do to the
// original path that would invalidate the
// newly created reference -- and if there
// were, then the user could have copied the
// original path into a new variable and
// borrowed *that* one, leaving the original
// path unborrowed.
return true;
}
_ => {}
}
}
}
false
}
}