diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'rust/alloc/vec')
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/drain.rs | 255 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/extract_if.rs | 115 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/into_iter.rs | 454 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/is_zero.rs | 204 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs | 3683 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/partial_eq.rs | 49 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/set_len_on_drop.rs | 35 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | rust/alloc/vec/spec_extend.rs | 119 | 
8 files changed, 0 insertions, 4914 deletions
diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/drain.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/drain.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 78177a9e2ad0..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/drain.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,255 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -use crate::alloc::{Allocator, Global}; -use core::fmt; -use core::iter::{FusedIterator, TrustedLen}; -use core::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop, SizedTypeProperties}; -use core::ptr::{self, NonNull}; -use core::slice::{self}; - -use super::Vec; - -/// A draining iterator for `Vec<T>`. -/// -/// This `struct` is created by [`Vec::drain`]. -/// See its documentation for more. -/// -/// # Example -/// -/// ``` -/// let mut v = vec![0, 1, 2]; -/// let iter: std::vec::Drain<'_, _> = v.drain(..); -/// ``` -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -pub struct Drain< -    'a, -    T: 'a, -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] A: Allocator + 'a = Global, -> { -    /// Index of tail to preserve -    pub(super) tail_start: usize, -    /// Length of tail -    pub(super) tail_len: usize, -    /// Current remaining range to remove -    pub(super) iter: slice::Iter<'a, T>, -    pub(super) vec: NonNull<Vec<T, A>>, -} - -#[stable(feature = "collection_debug", since = "1.17.0")] -impl<T: fmt::Debug, A: Allocator> fmt::Debug for Drain<'_, T, A> { -    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { -        f.debug_tuple("Drain").field(&self.iter.as_slice()).finish() -    } -} - -impl<'a, T, A: Allocator> Drain<'a, T, A> { -    /// Returns the remaining items of this iterator as a slice. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec!['a', 'b', 'c']; -    /// let mut drain = vec.drain(..); -    /// assert_eq!(drain.as_slice(), &['a', 'b', 'c']); -    /// let _ = drain.next().unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(drain.as_slice(), &['b', 'c']); -    /// ``` -    #[must_use] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_drain_as_slice", since = "1.46.0")] -    pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T] { -        self.iter.as_slice() -    } - -    /// Returns a reference to the underlying allocator. -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    #[must_use] -    #[inline] -    pub fn allocator(&self) -> &A { -        unsafe { self.vec.as_ref().allocator() } -    } - -    /// Keep unyielded elements in the source `Vec`. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(drain_keep_rest)] -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec!['a', 'b', 'c']; -    /// let mut drain = vec.drain(..); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(drain.next().unwrap(), 'a'); -    /// -    /// // This call keeps 'b' and 'c' in the vec. -    /// drain.keep_rest(); -    /// -    /// // If we wouldn't call `keep_rest()`, -    /// // `vec` would be empty. -    /// assert_eq!(vec, ['b', 'c']); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "drain_keep_rest", issue = "101122")] -    pub fn keep_rest(self) { -        // At this moment layout looks like this: -        // -        // [head] [yielded by next] [unyielded] [yielded by next_back] [tail] -        //        ^-- start         \_________/-- unyielded_len        \____/-- self.tail_len -        //                          ^-- unyielded_ptr                  ^-- tail -        // -        // Normally `Drop` impl would drop [unyielded] and then move [tail] to the `start`. -        // Here we want to -        // 1. Move [unyielded] to `start` -        // 2. Move [tail] to a new start at `start + len(unyielded)` -        // 3. Update length of the original vec to `len(head) + len(unyielded) + len(tail)` -        //    a. In case of ZST, this is the only thing we want to do -        // 4. Do *not* drop self, as everything is put in a consistent state already, there is nothing to do -        let mut this = ManuallyDrop::new(self); - -        unsafe { -            let source_vec = this.vec.as_mut(); - -            let start = source_vec.len(); -            let tail = this.tail_start; - -            let unyielded_len = this.iter.len(); -            let unyielded_ptr = this.iter.as_slice().as_ptr(); - -            // ZSTs have no identity, so we don't need to move them around. -            if !T::IS_ZST { -                let start_ptr = source_vec.as_mut_ptr().add(start); - -                // memmove back unyielded elements -                if unyielded_ptr != start_ptr { -                    let src = unyielded_ptr; -                    let dst = start_ptr; - -                    ptr::copy(src, dst, unyielded_len); -                } - -                // memmove back untouched tail -                if tail != (start + unyielded_len) { -                    let src = source_vec.as_ptr().add(tail); -                    let dst = start_ptr.add(unyielded_len); -                    ptr::copy(src, dst, this.tail_len); -                } -            } - -            source_vec.set_len(start + unyielded_len + this.tail_len); -        } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "vec_drain_as_slice", since = "1.46.0")] -impl<'a, T, A: Allocator> AsRef<[T]> for Drain<'a, T, A> { -    fn as_ref(&self) -> &[T] { -        self.as_slice() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -unsafe impl<T: Sync, A: Sync + Allocator> Sync for Drain<'_, T, A> {} -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -unsafe impl<T: Send, A: Send + Allocator> Send for Drain<'_, T, A> {} - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> Iterator for Drain<'_, T, A> { -    type Item = T; - -    #[inline] -    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        self.iter.next().map(|elt| unsafe { ptr::read(elt as *const _) }) -    } - -    fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { -        self.iter.size_hint() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> DoubleEndedIterator for Drain<'_, T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        self.iter.next_back().map(|elt| unsafe { ptr::read(elt as *const _) }) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> Drop for Drain<'_, T, A> { -    fn drop(&mut self) { -        /// Moves back the un-`Drain`ed elements to restore the original `Vec`. -        struct DropGuard<'r, 'a, T, A: Allocator>(&'r mut Drain<'a, T, A>); - -        impl<'r, 'a, T, A: Allocator> Drop for DropGuard<'r, 'a, T, A> { -            fn drop(&mut self) { -                if self.0.tail_len > 0 { -                    unsafe { -                        let source_vec = self.0.vec.as_mut(); -                        // memmove back untouched tail, update to new length -                        let start = source_vec.len(); -                        let tail = self.0.tail_start; -                        if tail != start { -                            let src = source_vec.as_ptr().add(tail); -                            let dst = source_vec.as_mut_ptr().add(start); -                            ptr::copy(src, dst, self.0.tail_len); -                        } -                        source_vec.set_len(start + self.0.tail_len); -                    } -                } -            } -        } - -        let iter = mem::take(&mut self.iter); -        let drop_len = iter.len(); - -        let mut vec = self.vec; - -        if T::IS_ZST { -            // ZSTs have no identity, so we don't need to move them around, we only need to drop the correct amount. -            // this can be achieved by manipulating the Vec length instead of moving values out from `iter`. -            unsafe { -                let vec = vec.as_mut(); -                let old_len = vec.len(); -                vec.set_len(old_len + drop_len + self.tail_len); -                vec.truncate(old_len + self.tail_len); -            } - -            return; -        } - -        // ensure elements are moved back into their appropriate places, even when drop_in_place panics -        let _guard = DropGuard(self); - -        if drop_len == 0 { -            return; -        } - -        // as_slice() must only be called when iter.len() is > 0 because -        // it also gets touched by vec::Splice which may turn it into a dangling pointer -        // which would make it and the vec pointer point to different allocations which would -        // lead to invalid pointer arithmetic below. -        let drop_ptr = iter.as_slice().as_ptr(); - -        unsafe { -            // drop_ptr comes from a slice::Iter which only gives us a &[T] but for drop_in_place -            // a pointer with mutable provenance is necessary. Therefore we must reconstruct -            // it from the original vec but also avoid creating a &mut to the front since that could -            // invalidate raw pointers to it which some unsafe code might rely on. -            let vec_ptr = vec.as_mut().as_mut_ptr(); -            let drop_offset = drop_ptr.sub_ptr(vec_ptr); -            let to_drop = ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(vec_ptr.add(drop_offset), drop_len); -            ptr::drop_in_place(to_drop); -        } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> ExactSizeIterator for Drain<'_, T, A> { -    fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { -        self.iter.is_empty() -    } -} - -#[unstable(feature = "trusted_len", issue = "37572")] -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> TrustedLen for Drain<'_, T, A> {} - -#[stable(feature = "fused", since = "1.26.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> FusedIterator for Drain<'_, T, A> {} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/extract_if.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/extract_if.rs deleted file mode 100644 index f314a51d4d3d..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/extract_if.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,115 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -use crate::alloc::{Allocator, Global}; -use core::ptr; -use core::slice; - -use super::Vec; - -/// An iterator which uses a closure to determine if an element should be removed. -/// -/// This struct is created by [`Vec::extract_if`]. -/// See its documentation for more. -/// -/// # Example -/// -/// ``` -/// #![feature(extract_if)] -/// -/// let mut v = vec![0, 1, 2]; -/// let iter: std::vec::ExtractIf<'_, _, _> = v.extract_if(|x| *x % 2 == 0); -/// ``` -#[unstable(feature = "extract_if", reason = "recently added", issue = "43244")] -#[derive(Debug)] -#[must_use = "iterators are lazy and do nothing unless consumed"] -pub struct ExtractIf< -    'a, -    T, -    F, -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] A: Allocator = Global, -> where -    F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -{ -    pub(super) vec: &'a mut Vec<T, A>, -    /// The index of the item that will be inspected by the next call to `next`. -    pub(super) idx: usize, -    /// The number of items that have been drained (removed) thus far. -    pub(super) del: usize, -    /// The original length of `vec` prior to draining. -    pub(super) old_len: usize, -    /// The filter test predicate. -    pub(super) pred: F, -} - -impl<T, F, A: Allocator> ExtractIf<'_, T, F, A> -where -    F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -{ -    /// Returns a reference to the underlying allocator. -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn allocator(&self) -> &A { -        self.vec.allocator() -    } -} - -#[unstable(feature = "extract_if", reason = "recently added", issue = "43244")] -impl<T, F, A: Allocator> Iterator for ExtractIf<'_, T, F, A> -where -    F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -{ -    type Item = T; - -    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        unsafe { -            while self.idx < self.old_len { -                let i = self.idx; -                let v = slice::from_raw_parts_mut(self.vec.as_mut_ptr(), self.old_len); -                let drained = (self.pred)(&mut v[i]); -                // Update the index *after* the predicate is called. If the index -                // is updated prior and the predicate panics, the element at this -                // index would be leaked. -                self.idx += 1; -                if drained { -                    self.del += 1; -                    return Some(ptr::read(&v[i])); -                } else if self.del > 0 { -                    let del = self.del; -                    let src: *const T = &v[i]; -                    let dst: *mut T = &mut v[i - del]; -                    ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src, dst, 1); -                } -            } -            None -        } -    } - -    fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { -        (0, Some(self.old_len - self.idx)) -    } -} - -#[unstable(feature = "extract_if", reason = "recently added", issue = "43244")] -impl<T, F, A: Allocator> Drop for ExtractIf<'_, T, F, A> -where -    F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -{ -    fn drop(&mut self) { -        unsafe { -            if self.idx < self.old_len && self.del > 0 { -                // This is a pretty messed up state, and there isn't really an -                // obviously right thing to do. We don't want to keep trying -                // to execute `pred`, so we just backshift all the unprocessed -                // elements and tell the vec that they still exist. The backshift -                // is required to prevent a double-drop of the last successfully -                // drained item prior to a panic in the predicate. -                let ptr = self.vec.as_mut_ptr(); -                let src = ptr.add(self.idx); -                let dst = src.sub(self.del); -                let tail_len = self.old_len - self.idx; -                src.copy_to(dst, tail_len); -            } -            self.vec.set_len(self.old_len - self.del); -        } -    } -} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/into_iter.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/into_iter.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 136bfe94af6c..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/into_iter.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,454 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use super::AsVecIntoIter; -use crate::alloc::{Allocator, Global}; -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use crate::collections::VecDeque; -use crate::raw_vec::RawVec; -use core::array; -use core::fmt; -use core::iter::{ -    FusedIterator, InPlaceIterable, SourceIter, TrustedFused, TrustedLen, -    TrustedRandomAccessNoCoerce, -}; -use core::marker::PhantomData; -use core::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop, MaybeUninit, SizedTypeProperties}; -use core::num::NonZeroUsize; -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use core::ops::Deref; -use core::ptr::{self, NonNull}; -use core::slice::{self}; - -/// An iterator that moves out of a vector. -/// -/// This `struct` is created by the `into_iter` method on [`Vec`](super::Vec) -/// (provided by the [`IntoIterator`] trait). -/// -/// # Example -/// -/// ``` -/// let v = vec![0, 1, 2]; -/// let iter: std::vec::IntoIter<_> = v.into_iter(); -/// ``` -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -#[rustc_insignificant_dtor] -pub struct IntoIter< -    T, -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] A: Allocator = Global, -> { -    pub(super) buf: NonNull<T>, -    pub(super) phantom: PhantomData<T>, -    pub(super) cap: usize, -    // the drop impl reconstructs a RawVec from buf, cap and alloc -    // to avoid dropping the allocator twice we need to wrap it into ManuallyDrop -    pub(super) alloc: ManuallyDrop<A>, -    pub(super) ptr: *const T, -    pub(super) end: *const T, // If T is a ZST, this is actually ptr+len. This encoding is picked so that -                              // ptr == end is a quick test for the Iterator being empty, that works -                              // for both ZST and non-ZST. -} - -#[stable(feature = "vec_intoiter_debug", since = "1.13.0")] -impl<T: fmt::Debug, A: Allocator> fmt::Debug for IntoIter<T, A> { -    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { -        f.debug_tuple("IntoIter").field(&self.as_slice()).finish() -    } -} - -impl<T, A: Allocator> IntoIter<T, A> { -    /// Returns the remaining items of this iterator as a slice. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let vec = vec!['a', 'b', 'c']; -    /// let mut into_iter = vec.into_iter(); -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.as_slice(), &['a', 'b', 'c']); -    /// let _ = into_iter.next().unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.as_slice(), &['b', 'c']); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "vec_into_iter_as_slice", since = "1.15.0")] -    pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T] { -        unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(self.ptr, self.len()) } -    } - -    /// Returns the remaining items of this iterator as a mutable slice. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let vec = vec!['a', 'b', 'c']; -    /// let mut into_iter = vec.into_iter(); -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.as_slice(), &['a', 'b', 'c']); -    /// into_iter.as_mut_slice()[2] = 'z'; -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.next().unwrap(), 'a'); -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.next().unwrap(), 'b'); -    /// assert_eq!(into_iter.next().unwrap(), 'z'); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "vec_into_iter_as_slice", since = "1.15.0")] -    pub fn as_mut_slice(&mut self) -> &mut [T] { -        unsafe { &mut *self.as_raw_mut_slice() } -    } - -    /// Returns a reference to the underlying allocator. -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn allocator(&self) -> &A { -        &self.alloc -    } - -    fn as_raw_mut_slice(&mut self) -> *mut [T] { -        ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(self.ptr as *mut T, self.len()) -    } - -    /// Drops remaining elements and relinquishes the backing allocation. -    /// This method guarantees it won't panic before relinquishing -    /// the backing allocation. -    /// -    /// This is roughly equivalent to the following, but more efficient -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// # let mut into_iter = Vec::<u8>::with_capacity(10).into_iter(); -    /// let mut into_iter = std::mem::replace(&mut into_iter, Vec::new().into_iter()); -    /// (&mut into_iter).for_each(drop); -    /// std::mem::forget(into_iter); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// This method is used by in-place iteration, refer to the vec::in_place_collect -    /// documentation for an overview. -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    pub(super) fn forget_allocation_drop_remaining(&mut self) { -        let remaining = self.as_raw_mut_slice(); - -        // overwrite the individual fields instead of creating a new -        // struct and then overwriting &mut self. -        // this creates less assembly -        self.cap = 0; -        self.buf = unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(RawVec::NEW.ptr()) }; -        self.ptr = self.buf.as_ptr(); -        self.end = self.buf.as_ptr(); - -        // Dropping the remaining elements can panic, so this needs to be -        // done only after updating the other fields. -        unsafe { -            ptr::drop_in_place(remaining); -        } -    } - -    /// Forgets to Drop the remaining elements while still allowing the backing allocation to be freed. -    pub(crate) fn forget_remaining_elements(&mut self) { -        // For th ZST case, it is crucial that we mutate `end` here, not `ptr`. -        // `ptr` must stay aligned, while `end` may be unaligned. -        self.end = self.ptr; -    } - -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    pub(crate) fn into_vecdeque(self) -> VecDeque<T, A> { -        // Keep our `Drop` impl from dropping the elements and the allocator -        let mut this = ManuallyDrop::new(self); - -        // SAFETY: This allocation originally came from a `Vec`, so it passes -        // all those checks. We have `this.buf` ≤ `this.ptr` ≤ `this.end`, -        // so the `sub_ptr`s below cannot wrap, and will produce a well-formed -        // range. `end` ≤ `buf + cap`, so the range will be in-bounds. -        // Taking `alloc` is ok because nothing else is going to look at it, -        // since our `Drop` impl isn't going to run so there's no more code. -        unsafe { -            let buf = this.buf.as_ptr(); -            let initialized = if T::IS_ZST { -                // All the pointers are the same for ZSTs, so it's fine to -                // say that they're all at the beginning of the "allocation". -                0..this.len() -            } else { -                this.ptr.sub_ptr(buf)..this.end.sub_ptr(buf) -            }; -            let cap = this.cap; -            let alloc = ManuallyDrop::take(&mut this.alloc); -            VecDeque::from_contiguous_raw_parts_in(buf, initialized, cap, alloc) -        } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "vec_intoiter_as_ref", since = "1.46.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> AsRef<[T]> for IntoIter<T, A> { -    fn as_ref(&self) -> &[T] { -        self.as_slice() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -unsafe impl<T: Send, A: Allocator + Send> Send for IntoIter<T, A> {} -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -unsafe impl<T: Sync, A: Allocator + Sync> Sync for IntoIter<T, A> {} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> Iterator for IntoIter<T, A> { -    type Item = T; - -    #[inline] -    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        if self.ptr == self.end { -            None -        } else if T::IS_ZST { -            // `ptr` has to stay where it is to remain aligned, so we reduce the length by 1 by -            // reducing the `end`. -            self.end = self.end.wrapping_byte_sub(1); - -            // Make up a value of this ZST. -            Some(unsafe { mem::zeroed() }) -        } else { -            let old = self.ptr; -            self.ptr = unsafe { self.ptr.add(1) }; - -            Some(unsafe { ptr::read(old) }) -        } -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { -        let exact = if T::IS_ZST { -            self.end.addr().wrapping_sub(self.ptr.addr()) -        } else { -            unsafe { self.end.sub_ptr(self.ptr) } -        }; -        (exact, Some(exact)) -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn advance_by(&mut self, n: usize) -> Result<(), NonZeroUsize> { -        let step_size = self.len().min(n); -        let to_drop = ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(self.ptr as *mut T, step_size); -        if T::IS_ZST { -            // See `next` for why we sub `end` here. -            self.end = self.end.wrapping_byte_sub(step_size); -        } else { -            // SAFETY: the min() above ensures that step_size is in bounds -            self.ptr = unsafe { self.ptr.add(step_size) }; -        } -        // SAFETY: the min() above ensures that step_size is in bounds -        unsafe { -            ptr::drop_in_place(to_drop); -        } -        NonZeroUsize::new(n - step_size).map_or(Ok(()), Err) -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn count(self) -> usize { -        self.len() -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn next_chunk<const N: usize>(&mut self) -> Result<[T; N], core::array::IntoIter<T, N>> { -        let mut raw_ary = MaybeUninit::uninit_array(); - -        let len = self.len(); - -        if T::IS_ZST { -            if len < N { -                self.forget_remaining_elements(); -                // Safety: ZSTs can be conjured ex nihilo, only the amount has to be correct -                return Err(unsafe { array::IntoIter::new_unchecked(raw_ary, 0..len) }); -            } - -            self.end = self.end.wrapping_byte_sub(N); -            // Safety: ditto -            return Ok(unsafe { raw_ary.transpose().assume_init() }); -        } - -        if len < N { -            // Safety: `len` indicates that this many elements are available and we just checked that -            // it fits into the array. -            unsafe { -                ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(self.ptr, raw_ary.as_mut_ptr() as *mut T, len); -                self.forget_remaining_elements(); -                return Err(array::IntoIter::new_unchecked(raw_ary, 0..len)); -            } -        } - -        // Safety: `len` is larger than the array size. Copy a fixed amount here to fully initialize -        // the array. -        return unsafe { -            ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(self.ptr, raw_ary.as_mut_ptr() as *mut T, N); -            self.ptr = self.ptr.add(N); -            Ok(raw_ary.transpose().assume_init()) -        }; -    } - -    unsafe fn __iterator_get_unchecked(&mut self, i: usize) -> Self::Item -    where -        Self: TrustedRandomAccessNoCoerce, -    { -        // SAFETY: the caller must guarantee that `i` is in bounds of the -        // `Vec<T>`, so `i` cannot overflow an `isize`, and the `self.ptr.add(i)` -        // is guaranteed to pointer to an element of the `Vec<T>` and -        // thus guaranteed to be valid to dereference. -        // -        // Also note the implementation of `Self: TrustedRandomAccess` requires -        // that `T: Copy` so reading elements from the buffer doesn't invalidate -        // them for `Drop`. -        unsafe { if T::IS_ZST { mem::zeroed() } else { ptr::read(self.ptr.add(i)) } } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> DoubleEndedIterator for IntoIter<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        if self.end == self.ptr { -            None -        } else if T::IS_ZST { -            // See above for why 'ptr.offset' isn't used -            self.end = self.end.wrapping_byte_sub(1); - -            // Make up a value of this ZST. -            Some(unsafe { mem::zeroed() }) -        } else { -            self.end = unsafe { self.end.sub(1) }; - -            Some(unsafe { ptr::read(self.end) }) -        } -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn advance_back_by(&mut self, n: usize) -> Result<(), NonZeroUsize> { -        let step_size = self.len().min(n); -        if T::IS_ZST { -            // SAFETY: same as for advance_by() -            self.end = self.end.wrapping_byte_sub(step_size); -        } else { -            // SAFETY: same as for advance_by() -            self.end = unsafe { self.end.sub(step_size) }; -        } -        let to_drop = ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(self.end as *mut T, step_size); -        // SAFETY: same as for advance_by() -        unsafe { -            ptr::drop_in_place(to_drop); -        } -        NonZeroUsize::new(n - step_size).map_or(Ok(()), Err) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> ExactSizeIterator for IntoIter<T, A> { -    fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { -        self.ptr == self.end -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "fused", since = "1.26.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> FusedIterator for IntoIter<T, A> {} - -#[doc(hidden)] -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "trusted_fused")] -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> TrustedFused for IntoIter<T, A> {} - -#[unstable(feature = "trusted_len", issue = "37572")] -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> TrustedLen for IntoIter<T, A> {} - -#[stable(feature = "default_iters", since = "1.70.0")] -impl<T, A> Default for IntoIter<T, A> -where -    A: Allocator + Default, -{ -    /// Creates an empty `vec::IntoIter`. -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// # use std::vec; -    /// let iter: vec::IntoIter<u8> = Default::default(); -    /// assert_eq!(iter.len(), 0); -    /// assert_eq!(iter.as_slice(), &[]); -    /// ``` -    fn default() -> Self { -        super::Vec::new_in(Default::default()).into_iter() -    } -} - -#[doc(hidden)] -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "std_internals")] -#[rustc_unsafe_specialization_marker] -pub trait NonDrop {} - -// T: Copy as approximation for !Drop since get_unchecked does not advance self.ptr -// and thus we can't implement drop-handling -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "std_internals")] -impl<T: Copy> NonDrop for T {} - -#[doc(hidden)] -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "std_internals")] -// TrustedRandomAccess (without NoCoerce) must not be implemented because -// subtypes/supertypes of `T` might not be `NonDrop` -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> TrustedRandomAccessNoCoerce for IntoIter<T, A> -where -    T: NonDrop, -{ -    const MAY_HAVE_SIDE_EFFECT: bool = false; -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_into_iter_clone", since = "1.8.0")] -impl<T: Clone, A: Allocator + Clone> Clone for IntoIter<T, A> { -    #[cfg(not(test))] -    fn clone(&self) -> Self { -        self.as_slice().to_vec_in(self.alloc.deref().clone()).into_iter() -    } -    #[cfg(test)] -    fn clone(&self) -> Self { -        crate::slice::to_vec(self.as_slice(), self.alloc.deref().clone()).into_iter() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -unsafe impl<#[may_dangle] T, A: Allocator> Drop for IntoIter<T, A> { -    fn drop(&mut self) { -        struct DropGuard<'a, T, A: Allocator>(&'a mut IntoIter<T, A>); - -        impl<T, A: Allocator> Drop for DropGuard<'_, T, A> { -            fn drop(&mut self) { -                unsafe { -                    // `IntoIter::alloc` is not used anymore after this and will be dropped by RawVec -                    let alloc = ManuallyDrop::take(&mut self.0.alloc); -                    // RawVec handles deallocation -                    let _ = RawVec::from_raw_parts_in(self.0.buf.as_ptr(), self.0.cap, alloc); -                } -            } -        } - -        let guard = DropGuard(self); -        // destroy the remaining elements -        unsafe { -            ptr::drop_in_place(guard.0.as_raw_mut_slice()); -        } -        // now `guard` will be dropped and do the rest -    } -} - -// In addition to the SAFETY invariants of the following three unsafe traits -// also refer to the vec::in_place_collect module documentation to get an overview -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "inplace_iteration")] -#[doc(hidden)] -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> InPlaceIterable for IntoIter<T, A> { -    const EXPAND_BY: Option<NonZeroUsize> = NonZeroUsize::new(1); -    const MERGE_BY: Option<NonZeroUsize> = NonZeroUsize::new(1); -} - -#[unstable(issue = "none", feature = "inplace_iteration")] -#[doc(hidden)] -unsafe impl<T, A: Allocator> SourceIter for IntoIter<T, A> { -    type Source = Self; - -    #[inline] -    unsafe fn as_inner(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Source { -        self -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -unsafe impl<T> AsVecIntoIter for IntoIter<T> { -    type Item = T; - -    fn as_into_iter(&mut self) -> &mut IntoIter<Self::Item> { -        self -    } -} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/is_zero.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/is_zero.rs deleted file mode 100644 index d928dcf90e80..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/is_zero.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,204 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -use core::num::{Saturating, Wrapping}; - -use crate::boxed::Box; - -#[rustc_specialization_trait] -pub(super) unsafe trait IsZero { -    /// Whether this value's representation is all zeros, -    /// or can be represented with all zeroes. -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool; -} - -macro_rules! impl_is_zero { -    ($t:ty, $is_zero:expr) => { -        unsafe impl IsZero for $t { -            #[inline] -            fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -                $is_zero(*self) -            } -        } -    }; -} - -impl_is_zero!(i8, |x| x == 0); // It is needed to impl for arrays and tuples of i8. -impl_is_zero!(i16, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(i32, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(i64, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(i128, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(isize, |x| x == 0); - -impl_is_zero!(u8, |x| x == 0); // It is needed to impl for arrays and tuples of u8. -impl_is_zero!(u16, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(u32, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(u64, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(u128, |x| x == 0); -impl_is_zero!(usize, |x| x == 0); - -impl_is_zero!(bool, |x| x == false); -impl_is_zero!(char, |x| x == '\0'); - -impl_is_zero!(f32, |x: f32| x.to_bits() == 0); -impl_is_zero!(f64, |x: f64| x.to_bits() == 0); - -unsafe impl<T> IsZero for *const T { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        (*self).is_null() -    } -} - -unsafe impl<T> IsZero for *mut T { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        (*self).is_null() -    } -} - -unsafe impl<T: IsZero, const N: usize> IsZero for [T; N] { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        // Because this is generated as a runtime check, it's not obvious that -        // it's worth doing if the array is really long. The threshold here -        // is largely arbitrary, but was picked because as of 2022-07-01 LLVM -        // fails to const-fold the check in `vec![[1; 32]; n]` -        // See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97581#issuecomment-1166628022 -        // Feel free to tweak if you have better evidence. - -        N <= 16 && self.iter().all(IsZero::is_zero) -    } -} - -// This is recursive macro. -macro_rules! impl_for_tuples { -    // Stopper -    () => { -        // No use for implementing for empty tuple because it is ZST. -    }; -    ($first_arg:ident $(,$rest:ident)*) => { -        unsafe impl <$first_arg: IsZero, $($rest: IsZero,)*> IsZero for ($first_arg, $($rest,)*){ -            #[inline] -            fn is_zero(&self) -> bool{ -                // Destructure tuple to N references -                // Rust allows to hide generic params by local variable names. -                #[allow(non_snake_case)] -                let ($first_arg, $($rest,)*) = self; - -                $first_arg.is_zero() -                    $( && $rest.is_zero() )* -            } -        } - -        impl_for_tuples!($($rest),*); -    } -} - -impl_for_tuples!(A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H); - -// `Option<&T>` and `Option<Box<T>>` are guaranteed to represent `None` as null. -// For fat pointers, the bytes that would be the pointer metadata in the `Some` -// variant are padding in the `None` variant, so ignoring them and -// zero-initializing instead is ok. -// `Option<&mut T>` never implements `Clone`, so there's no need for an impl of -// `SpecFromElem`. - -unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> IsZero for Option<&T> { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        self.is_none() -    } -} - -unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> IsZero for Option<Box<T>> { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        self.is_none() -    } -} - -// `Option<num::NonZeroU32>` and similar have a representation guarantee that -// they're the same size as the corresponding `u32` type, as well as a guarantee -// that transmuting between `NonZeroU32` and `Option<num::NonZeroU32>` works. -// While the documentation officially makes it UB to transmute from `None`, -// we're the standard library so we can make extra inferences, and we know that -// the only niche available to represent `None` is the one that's all zeros. - -macro_rules! impl_is_zero_option_of_nonzero { -    ($($t:ident,)+) => {$( -        unsafe impl IsZero for Option<core::num::$t> { -            #[inline] -            fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -                self.is_none() -            } -        } -    )+}; -} - -impl_is_zero_option_of_nonzero!( -    NonZeroU8, -    NonZeroU16, -    NonZeroU32, -    NonZeroU64, -    NonZeroU128, -    NonZeroI8, -    NonZeroI16, -    NonZeroI32, -    NonZeroI64, -    NonZeroI128, -    NonZeroUsize, -    NonZeroIsize, -); - -macro_rules! impl_is_zero_option_of_num { -    ($($t:ty,)+) => {$( -        unsafe impl IsZero for Option<$t> { -            #[inline] -            fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -                const { -                    let none: Self = unsafe { core::mem::MaybeUninit::zeroed().assume_init() }; -                    assert!(none.is_none()); -                } -                self.is_none() -            } -        } -    )+}; -} - -impl_is_zero_option_of_num!(u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, usize, isize,); - -unsafe impl<T: IsZero> IsZero for Wrapping<T> { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        self.0.is_zero() -    } -} - -unsafe impl<T: IsZero> IsZero for Saturating<T> { -    #[inline] -    fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -        self.0.is_zero() -    } -} - -macro_rules! impl_for_optional_bool { -    ($($t:ty,)+) => {$( -        unsafe impl IsZero for $t { -            #[inline] -            fn is_zero(&self) -> bool { -                // SAFETY: This is *not* a stable layout guarantee, but -                // inside `core` we're allowed to rely on the current rustc -                // behaviour that options of bools will be one byte with -                // no padding, so long as they're nested less than 254 deep. -                let raw: u8 = unsafe { core::mem::transmute(*self) }; -                raw == 0 -            } -        } -    )+}; -} -impl_for_optional_bool! { -    Option<bool>, -    Option<Option<bool>>, -    Option<Option<Option<bool>>>, -    // Could go further, but not worth the metadata overhead -} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 220fb9d6f45b..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/mod.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,3683 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -//! A contiguous growable array type with heap-allocated contents, written -//! `Vec<T>`. -//! -//! Vectors have *O*(1) indexing, amortized *O*(1) push (to the end) and -//! *O*(1) pop (from the end). -//! -//! Vectors ensure they never allocate more than `isize::MAX` bytes. -//! -//! # Examples -//! -//! You can explicitly create a [`Vec`] with [`Vec::new`]: -//! -//! ``` -//! let v: Vec<i32> = Vec::new(); -//! ``` -//! -//! ...or by using the [`vec!`] macro: -//! -//! ``` -//! let v: Vec<i32> = vec![]; -//! -//! let v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; -//! -//! let v = vec![0; 10]; // ten zeroes -//! ``` -//! -//! You can [`push`] values onto the end of a vector (which will grow the vector -//! as needed): -//! -//! ``` -//! let mut v = vec![1, 2]; -//! -//! v.push(3); -//! ``` -//! -//! Popping values works in much the same way: -//! -//! ``` -//! let mut v = vec![1, 2]; -//! -//! let two = v.pop(); -//! ``` -//! -//! Vectors also support indexing (through the [`Index`] and [`IndexMut`] traits): -//! -//! ``` -//! let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -//! let three = v[2]; -//! v[1] = v[1] + 5; -//! ``` -//! -//! [`push`]: Vec::push - -#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use core::cmp; -use core::cmp::Ordering; -use core::fmt; -use core::hash::{Hash, Hasher}; -use core::iter; -use core::marker::PhantomData; -use core::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop, MaybeUninit, SizedTypeProperties}; -use core::ops::{self, Index, IndexMut, Range, RangeBounds}; -use core::ptr::{self, NonNull}; -use core::slice::{self, SliceIndex}; - -use crate::alloc::{Allocator, Global}; -#[cfg(not(no_borrow))] -use crate::borrow::{Cow, ToOwned}; -use crate::boxed::Box; -use crate::collections::{TryReserveError, TryReserveErrorKind}; -use crate::raw_vec::RawVec; - -#[unstable(feature = "extract_if", reason = "recently added", issue = "43244")] -pub use self::extract_if::ExtractIf; - -mod extract_if; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_splice", since = "1.21.0")] -pub use self::splice::Splice; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod splice; - -#[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -pub use self::drain::Drain; - -mod drain; - -#[cfg(not(no_borrow))] -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod cow; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -pub(crate) use self::in_place_collect::AsVecIntoIter; -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -pub use self::into_iter::IntoIter; - -mod into_iter; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::is_zero::IsZero; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod is_zero; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod in_place_collect; - -mod partial_eq; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::spec_from_elem::SpecFromElem; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod spec_from_elem; - -use self::set_len_on_drop::SetLenOnDrop; - -mod set_len_on_drop; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::in_place_drop::{InPlaceDrop, InPlaceDstDataSrcBufDrop}; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod in_place_drop; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::spec_from_iter_nested::SpecFromIterNested; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod spec_from_iter_nested; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::spec_from_iter::SpecFromIter; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -mod spec_from_iter; - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use self::spec_extend::SpecExtend; - -use self::spec_extend::TrySpecExtend; - -mod spec_extend; - -/// A contiguous growable array type, written as `Vec<T>`, short for 'vector'. -/// -/// # Examples -/// -/// ``` -/// let mut vec = Vec::new(); -/// vec.push(1); -/// vec.push(2); -/// -/// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 2); -/// assert_eq!(vec[0], 1); -/// -/// assert_eq!(vec.pop(), Some(2)); -/// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 1); -/// -/// vec[0] = 7; -/// assert_eq!(vec[0], 7); -/// -/// vec.extend([1, 2, 3]); -/// -/// for x in &vec { -///     println!("{x}"); -/// } -/// assert_eq!(vec, [7, 1, 2, 3]); -/// ``` -/// -/// The [`vec!`] macro is provided for convenient initialization: -/// -/// ``` -/// let mut vec1 = vec![1, 2, 3]; -/// vec1.push(4); -/// let vec2 = Vec::from([1, 2, 3, 4]); -/// assert_eq!(vec1, vec2); -/// ``` -/// -/// It can also initialize each element of a `Vec<T>` with a given value. -/// This may be more efficient than performing allocation and initialization -/// in separate steps, especially when initializing a vector of zeros: -/// -/// ``` -/// let vec = vec![0; 5]; -/// assert_eq!(vec, [0, 0, 0, 0, 0]); -/// -/// // The following is equivalent, but potentially slower: -/// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(5); -/// vec.resize(5, 0); -/// assert_eq!(vec, [0, 0, 0, 0, 0]); -/// ``` -/// -/// For more information, see -/// [Capacity and Reallocation](#capacity-and-reallocation). -/// -/// Use a `Vec<T>` as an efficient stack: -/// -/// ``` -/// let mut stack = Vec::new(); -/// -/// stack.push(1); -/// stack.push(2); -/// stack.push(3); -/// -/// while let Some(top) = stack.pop() { -///     // Prints 3, 2, 1 -///     println!("{top}"); -/// } -/// ``` -/// -/// # Indexing -/// -/// The `Vec` type allows access to values by index, because it implements the -/// [`Index`] trait. An example will be more explicit: -/// -/// ``` -/// let v = vec![0, 2, 4, 6]; -/// println!("{}", v[1]); // it will display '2' -/// ``` -/// -/// However be careful: if you try to access an index which isn't in the `Vec`, -/// your software will panic! You cannot do this: -/// -/// ```should_panic -/// let v = vec![0, 2, 4, 6]; -/// println!("{}", v[6]); // it will panic! -/// ``` -/// -/// Use [`get`] and [`get_mut`] if you want to check whether the index is in -/// the `Vec`. -/// -/// # Slicing -/// -/// A `Vec` can be mutable. On the other hand, slices are read-only objects. -/// To get a [slice][prim@slice], use [`&`]. Example: -/// -/// ``` -/// fn read_slice(slice: &[usize]) { -///     // ... -/// } -/// -/// let v = vec![0, 1]; -/// read_slice(&v); -/// -/// // ... and that's all! -/// // you can also do it like this: -/// let u: &[usize] = &v; -/// // or like this: -/// let u: &[_] = &v; -/// ``` -/// -/// In Rust, it's more common to pass slices as arguments rather than vectors -/// when you just want to provide read access. The same goes for [`String`] and -/// [`&str`]. -/// -/// # Capacity and reallocation -/// -/// The capacity of a vector is the amount of space allocated for any future -/// elements that will be added onto the vector. This is not to be confused with -/// the *length* of a vector, which specifies the number of actual elements -/// within the vector. If a vector's length exceeds its capacity, its capacity -/// will automatically be increased, but its elements will have to be -/// reallocated. -/// -/// For example, a vector with capacity 10 and length 0 would be an empty vector -/// with space for 10 more elements. Pushing 10 or fewer elements onto the -/// vector will not change its capacity or cause reallocation to occur. However, -/// if the vector's length is increased to 11, it will have to reallocate, which -/// can be slow. For this reason, it is recommended to use [`Vec::with_capacity`] -/// whenever possible to specify how big the vector is expected to get. -/// -/// # Guarantees -/// -/// Due to its incredibly fundamental nature, `Vec` makes a lot of guarantees -/// about its design. This ensures that it's as low-overhead as possible in -/// the general case, and can be correctly manipulated in primitive ways -/// by unsafe code. Note that these guarantees refer to an unqualified `Vec<T>`. -/// If additional type parameters are added (e.g., to support custom allocators), -/// overriding their defaults may change the behavior. -/// -/// Most fundamentally, `Vec` is and always will be a (pointer, capacity, length) -/// triplet. No more, no less. The order of these fields is completely -/// unspecified, and you should use the appropriate methods to modify these. -/// The pointer will never be null, so this type is null-pointer-optimized. -/// -/// However, the pointer might not actually point to allocated memory. In particular, -/// if you construct a `Vec` with capacity 0 via [`Vec::new`], [`vec![]`][`vec!`], -/// [`Vec::with_capacity(0)`][`Vec::with_capacity`], or by calling [`shrink_to_fit`] -/// on an empty Vec, it will not allocate memory. Similarly, if you store zero-sized -/// types inside a `Vec`, it will not allocate space for them. *Note that in this case -/// the `Vec` might not report a [`capacity`] of 0*. `Vec` will allocate if and only -/// if <code>[mem::size_of::\<T>]\() * [capacity]\() > 0</code>. In general, `Vec`'s allocation -/// details are very subtle --- if you intend to allocate memory using a `Vec` -/// and use it for something else (either to pass to unsafe code, or to build your -/// own memory-backed collection), be sure to deallocate this memory by using -/// `from_raw_parts` to recover the `Vec` and then dropping it. -/// -/// If a `Vec` *has* allocated memory, then the memory it points to is on the heap -/// (as defined by the allocator Rust is configured to use by default), and its -/// pointer points to [`len`] initialized, contiguous elements in order (what -/// you would see if you coerced it to a slice), followed by <code>[capacity] - [len]</code> -/// logically uninitialized, contiguous elements. -/// -/// A vector containing the elements `'a'` and `'b'` with capacity 4 can be -/// visualized as below. The top part is the `Vec` struct, it contains a -/// pointer to the head of the allocation in the heap, length and capacity. -/// The bottom part is the allocation on the heap, a contiguous memory block. -/// -/// ```text -///             ptr      len  capacity -///        +--------+--------+--------+ -///        | 0x0123 |      2 |      4 | -///        +--------+--------+--------+ -///             | -///             v -/// Heap   +--------+--------+--------+--------+ -///        |    'a' |    'b' | uninit | uninit | -///        +--------+--------+--------+--------+ -/// ``` -/// -/// - **uninit** represents memory that is not initialized, see [`MaybeUninit`]. -/// - Note: the ABI is not stable and `Vec` makes no guarantees about its memory -///   layout (including the order of fields). -/// -/// `Vec` will never perform a "small optimization" where elements are actually -/// stored on the stack for two reasons: -/// -/// * It would make it more difficult for unsafe code to correctly manipulate -///   a `Vec`. The contents of a `Vec` wouldn't have a stable address if it were -///   only moved, and it would be more difficult to determine if a `Vec` had -///   actually allocated memory. -/// -/// * It would penalize the general case, incurring an additional branch -///   on every access. -/// -/// `Vec` will never automatically shrink itself, even if completely empty. This -/// ensures no unnecessary allocations or deallocations occur. Emptying a `Vec` -/// and then filling it back up to the same [`len`] should incur no calls to -/// the allocator. If you wish to free up unused memory, use -/// [`shrink_to_fit`] or [`shrink_to`]. -/// -/// [`push`] and [`insert`] will never (re)allocate if the reported capacity is -/// sufficient. [`push`] and [`insert`] *will* (re)allocate if -/// <code>[len] == [capacity]</code>. That is, the reported capacity is completely -/// accurate, and can be relied on. It can even be used to manually free the memory -/// allocated by a `Vec` if desired. Bulk insertion methods *may* reallocate, even -/// when not necessary. -/// -/// `Vec` does not guarantee any particular growth strategy when reallocating -/// when full, nor when [`reserve`] is called. The current strategy is basic -/// and it may prove desirable to use a non-constant growth factor. Whatever -/// strategy is used will of course guarantee *O*(1) amortized [`push`]. -/// -/// `vec![x; n]`, `vec![a, b, c, d]`, and -/// [`Vec::with_capacity(n)`][`Vec::with_capacity`], will all produce a `Vec` -/// with exactly the requested capacity. If <code>[len] == [capacity]</code>, -/// (as is the case for the [`vec!`] macro), then a `Vec<T>` can be converted to -/// and from a [`Box<[T]>`][owned slice] without reallocating or moving the elements. -/// -/// `Vec` will not specifically overwrite any data that is removed from it, -/// but also won't specifically preserve it. Its uninitialized memory is -/// scratch space that it may use however it wants. It will generally just do -/// whatever is most efficient or otherwise easy to implement. Do not rely on -/// removed data to be erased for security purposes. Even if you drop a `Vec`, its -/// buffer may simply be reused by another allocation. Even if you zero a `Vec`'s memory -/// first, that might not actually happen because the optimizer does not consider -/// this a side-effect that must be preserved. There is one case which we will -/// not break, however: using `unsafe` code to write to the excess capacity, -/// and then increasing the length to match, is always valid. -/// -/// Currently, `Vec` does not guarantee the order in which elements are dropped. -/// The order has changed in the past and may change again. -/// -/// [`get`]: slice::get -/// [`get_mut`]: slice::get_mut -/// [`String`]: crate::string::String -/// [`&str`]: type@str -/// [`shrink_to_fit`]: Vec::shrink_to_fit -/// [`shrink_to`]: Vec::shrink_to -/// [capacity]: Vec::capacity -/// [`capacity`]: Vec::capacity -/// [mem::size_of::\<T>]: core::mem::size_of -/// [len]: Vec::len -/// [`len`]: Vec::len -/// [`push`]: Vec::push -/// [`insert`]: Vec::insert -/// [`reserve`]: Vec::reserve -/// [`MaybeUninit`]: core::mem::MaybeUninit -/// [owned slice]: Box -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -#[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "Vec")] -#[rustc_insignificant_dtor] -pub struct Vec<T, #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] A: Allocator = Global> { -    buf: RawVec<T, A>, -    len: usize, -} - -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// -// Inherent methods -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// - -impl<T> Vec<T> { -    /// Constructs a new, empty `Vec<T>`. -    /// -    /// The vector will not allocate until elements are pushed onto it. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// # #![allow(unused_mut)] -    /// let mut vec: Vec<i32> = Vec::new(); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[rustc_const_stable(feature = "const_vec_new", since = "1.39.0")] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    #[must_use] -    pub const fn new() -> Self { -        Vec { buf: RawVec::NEW, len: 0 } -    } - -    /// Constructs a new, empty `Vec<T>` with at least the specified capacity. -    /// -    /// The vector will be able to hold at least `capacity` elements without -    /// reallocating. This method is allowed to allocate for more elements than -    /// `capacity`. If `capacity` is 0, the vector will not allocate. -    /// -    /// It is important to note that although the returned vector has the -    /// minimum *capacity* specified, the vector will have a zero *length*. For -    /// an explanation of the difference between length and capacity, see -    /// *[Capacity and reallocation]*. -    /// -    /// If it is important to know the exact allocated capacity of a `Vec`, -    /// always use the [`capacity`] method after construction. -    /// -    /// For `Vec<T>` where `T` is a zero-sized type, there will be no allocation -    /// and the capacity will always be `usize::MAX`. -    /// -    /// [Capacity and reallocation]: #capacity-and-reallocation -    /// [`capacity`]: Vec::capacity -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// -    /// // The vector contains no items, even though it has capacity for more -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // These are all done without reallocating... -    /// for i in 0..10 { -    ///     vec.push(i); -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // ...but this may make the vector reallocate -    /// vec.push(11); -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 11); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// -    /// // A vector of a zero-sized type will always over-allocate, since no -    /// // allocation is necessary -    /// let vec_units = Vec::<()>::with_capacity(10); -    /// assert_eq!(vec_units.capacity(), usize::MAX); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    #[must_use] -    pub fn with_capacity(capacity: usize) -> Self { -        Self::with_capacity_in(capacity, Global) -    } - -    /// Tries to construct a new, empty `Vec<T>` with at least the specified capacity. -    /// -    /// The vector will be able to hold at least `capacity` elements without -    /// reallocating. This method is allowed to allocate for more elements than -    /// `capacity`. If `capacity` is 0, the vector will not allocate. -    /// -    /// It is important to note that although the returned vector has the -    /// minimum *capacity* specified, the vector will have a zero *length*. For -    /// an explanation of the difference between length and capacity, see -    /// *[Capacity and reallocation]*. -    /// -    /// If it is important to know the exact allocated capacity of a `Vec`, -    /// always use the [`capacity`] method after construction. -    /// -    /// For `Vec<T>` where `T` is a zero-sized type, there will be no allocation -    /// and the capacity will always be `usize::MAX`. -    /// -    /// [Capacity and reallocation]: #capacity-and-reallocation -    /// [`capacity`]: Vec::capacity -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::try_with_capacity(10).unwrap(); -    /// -    /// // The vector contains no items, even though it has capacity for more -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // These are all done without reallocating... -    /// for i in 0..10 { -    ///     vec.push(i); -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // ...but this may make the vector reallocate -    /// vec.push(11); -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 11); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// -    /// let mut result = Vec::try_with_capacity(usize::MAX); -    /// assert!(result.is_err()); -    /// -    /// // A vector of a zero-sized type will always over-allocate, since no -    /// // allocation is necessary -    /// let vec_units = Vec::<()>::try_with_capacity(10).unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec_units.capacity(), usize::MAX); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "kernel", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn try_with_capacity(capacity: usize) -> Result<Self, TryReserveError> { -        Self::try_with_capacity_in(capacity, Global) -    } - -    /// Creates a `Vec<T>` directly from a pointer, a capacity, and a length. -    /// -    /// # Safety -    /// -    /// This is highly unsafe, due to the number of invariants that aren't -    /// checked: -    /// -    /// * `ptr` must have been allocated using the global allocator, such as via -    ///   the [`alloc::alloc`] function. -    /// * `T` needs to have the same alignment as what `ptr` was allocated with. -    ///   (`T` having a less strict alignment is not sufficient, the alignment really -    ///   needs to be equal to satisfy the [`dealloc`] requirement that memory must be -    ///   allocated and deallocated with the same layout.) -    /// * The size of `T` times the `capacity` (ie. the allocated size in bytes) needs -    ///   to be the same size as the pointer was allocated with. (Because similar to -    ///   alignment, [`dealloc`] must be called with the same layout `size`.) -    /// * `length` needs to be less than or equal to `capacity`. -    /// * The first `length` values must be properly initialized values of type `T`. -    /// * `capacity` needs to be the capacity that the pointer was allocated with. -    /// * The allocated size in bytes must be no larger than `isize::MAX`. -    ///   See the safety documentation of [`pointer::offset`]. -    /// -    /// These requirements are always upheld by any `ptr` that has been allocated -    /// via `Vec<T>`. Other allocation sources are allowed if the invariants are -    /// upheld. -    /// -    /// Violating these may cause problems like corrupting the allocator's -    /// internal data structures. For example it is normally **not** safe -    /// to build a `Vec<u8>` from a pointer to a C `char` array with length -    /// `size_t`, doing so is only safe if the array was initially allocated by -    /// a `Vec` or `String`. -    /// It's also not safe to build one from a `Vec<u16>` and its length, because -    /// the allocator cares about the alignment, and these two types have different -    /// alignments. The buffer was allocated with alignment 2 (for `u16`), but after -    /// turning it into a `Vec<u8>` it'll be deallocated with alignment 1. To avoid -    /// these issues, it is often preferable to do casting/transmuting using -    /// [`slice::from_raw_parts`] instead. -    /// -    /// The ownership of `ptr` is effectively transferred to the -    /// `Vec<T>` which may then deallocate, reallocate or change the -    /// contents of memory pointed to by the pointer at will. Ensure -    /// that nothing else uses the pointer after calling this -    /// function. -    /// -    /// [`String`]: crate::string::String -    /// [`alloc::alloc`]: crate::alloc::alloc -    /// [`dealloc`]: crate::alloc::GlobalAlloc::dealloc -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// use std::ptr; -    /// use std::mem; -    /// -    /// let v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// -    // FIXME Update this when vec_into_raw_parts is stabilized -    /// // Prevent running `v`'s destructor so we are in complete control -    /// // of the allocation. -    /// let mut v = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(v); -    /// -    /// // Pull out the various important pieces of information about `v` -    /// let p = v.as_mut_ptr(); -    /// let len = v.len(); -    /// let cap = v.capacity(); -    /// -    /// unsafe { -    ///     // Overwrite memory with 4, 5, 6 -    ///     for i in 0..len { -    ///         ptr::write(p.add(i), 4 + i); -    ///     } -    /// -    ///     // Put everything back together into a Vec -    ///     let rebuilt = Vec::from_raw_parts(p, len, cap); -    ///     assert_eq!(rebuilt, [4, 5, 6]); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Using memory that was allocated elsewhere: -    /// -    /// ```rust -    /// use std::alloc::{alloc, Layout}; -    /// -    /// fn main() { -    ///     let layout = Layout::array::<u32>(16).expect("overflow cannot happen"); -    /// -    ///     let vec = unsafe { -    ///         let mem = alloc(layout).cast::<u32>(); -    ///         if mem.is_null() { -    ///             return; -    ///         } -    /// -    ///         mem.write(1_000_000); -    /// -    ///         Vec::from_raw_parts(mem, 1, 16) -    ///     }; -    /// -    ///     assert_eq!(vec, &[1_000_000]); -    ///     assert_eq!(vec.capacity(), 16); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub unsafe fn from_raw_parts(ptr: *mut T, length: usize, capacity: usize) -> Self { -        unsafe { Self::from_raw_parts_in(ptr, length, capacity, Global) } -    } -} - -impl<T, A: Allocator> Vec<T, A> { -    /// Constructs a new, empty `Vec<T, A>`. -    /// -    /// The vector will not allocate until elements are pushed onto it. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(allocator_api)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::System; -    /// -    /// # #[allow(unused_mut)] -    /// let mut vec: Vec<i32, _> = Vec::new_in(System); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    pub const fn new_in(alloc: A) -> Self { -        Vec { buf: RawVec::new_in(alloc), len: 0 } -    } - -    /// Constructs a new, empty `Vec<T, A>` with at least the specified capacity -    /// with the provided allocator. -    /// -    /// The vector will be able to hold at least `capacity` elements without -    /// reallocating. This method is allowed to allocate for more elements than -    /// `capacity`. If `capacity` is 0, the vector will not allocate. -    /// -    /// It is important to note that although the returned vector has the -    /// minimum *capacity* specified, the vector will have a zero *length*. For -    /// an explanation of the difference between length and capacity, see -    /// *[Capacity and reallocation]*. -    /// -    /// If it is important to know the exact allocated capacity of a `Vec`, -    /// always use the [`capacity`] method after construction. -    /// -    /// For `Vec<T, A>` where `T` is a zero-sized type, there will be no allocation -    /// and the capacity will always be `usize::MAX`. -    /// -    /// [Capacity and reallocation]: #capacity-and-reallocation -    /// [`capacity`]: Vec::capacity -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(allocator_api)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::System; -    /// -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity_in(10, System); -    /// -    /// // The vector contains no items, even though it has capacity for more -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // These are all done without reallocating... -    /// for i in 0..10 { -    ///     vec.push(i); -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // ...but this may make the vector reallocate -    /// vec.push(11); -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 11); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// -    /// // A vector of a zero-sized type will always over-allocate, since no -    /// // allocation is necessary -    /// let vec_units = Vec::<(), System>::with_capacity_in(10, System); -    /// assert_eq!(vec_units.capacity(), usize::MAX); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    pub fn with_capacity_in(capacity: usize, alloc: A) -> Self { -        Vec { buf: RawVec::with_capacity_in(capacity, alloc), len: 0 } -    } - -    /// Tries to construct a new, empty `Vec<T, A>` with at least the specified capacity -    /// with the provided allocator. -    /// -    /// The vector will be able to hold at least `capacity` elements without -    /// reallocating. This method is allowed to allocate for more elements than -    /// `capacity`. If `capacity` is 0, the vector will not allocate. -    /// -    /// It is important to note that although the returned vector has the -    /// minimum *capacity* specified, the vector will have a zero *length*. For -    /// an explanation of the difference between length and capacity, see -    /// *[Capacity and reallocation]*. -    /// -    /// If it is important to know the exact allocated capacity of a `Vec`, -    /// always use the [`capacity`] method after construction. -    /// -    /// For `Vec<T, A>` where `T` is a zero-sized type, there will be no allocation -    /// and the capacity will always be `usize::MAX`. -    /// -    /// [Capacity and reallocation]: #capacity-and-reallocation -    /// [`capacity`]: Vec::capacity -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(allocator_api)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::System; -    /// -    /// let mut vec = Vec::try_with_capacity_in(10, System).unwrap(); -    /// -    /// // The vector contains no items, even though it has capacity for more -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // These are all done without reallocating... -    /// for i in 0..10 { -    ///     vec.push(i); -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// -    /// // ...but this may make the vector reallocate -    /// vec.push(11); -    /// assert_eq!(vec.len(), 11); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// -    /// let mut result = Vec::try_with_capacity_in(usize::MAX, System); -    /// assert!(result.is_err()); -    /// -    /// // A vector of a zero-sized type will always over-allocate, since no -    /// // allocation is necessary -    /// let vec_units = Vec::<(), System>::try_with_capacity_in(10, System).unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec_units.capacity(), usize::MAX); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "kernel", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn try_with_capacity_in(capacity: usize, alloc: A) -> Result<Self, TryReserveError> { -        Ok(Vec { buf: RawVec::try_with_capacity_in(capacity, alloc)?, len: 0 }) -    } - -    /// Creates a `Vec<T, A>` directly from a pointer, a capacity, a length, -    /// and an allocator. -    /// -    /// # Safety -    /// -    /// This is highly unsafe, due to the number of invariants that aren't -    /// checked: -    /// -    /// * `ptr` must be [*currently allocated*] via the given allocator `alloc`. -    /// * `T` needs to have the same alignment as what `ptr` was allocated with. -    ///   (`T` having a less strict alignment is not sufficient, the alignment really -    ///   needs to be equal to satisfy the [`dealloc`] requirement that memory must be -    ///   allocated and deallocated with the same layout.) -    /// * The size of `T` times the `capacity` (ie. the allocated size in bytes) needs -    ///   to be the same size as the pointer was allocated with. (Because similar to -    ///   alignment, [`dealloc`] must be called with the same layout `size`.) -    /// * `length` needs to be less than or equal to `capacity`. -    /// * The first `length` values must be properly initialized values of type `T`. -    /// * `capacity` needs to [*fit*] the layout size that the pointer was allocated with. -    /// * The allocated size in bytes must be no larger than `isize::MAX`. -    ///   See the safety documentation of [`pointer::offset`]. -    /// -    /// These requirements are always upheld by any `ptr` that has been allocated -    /// via `Vec<T, A>`. Other allocation sources are allowed if the invariants are -    /// upheld. -    /// -    /// Violating these may cause problems like corrupting the allocator's -    /// internal data structures. For example it is **not** safe -    /// to build a `Vec<u8>` from a pointer to a C `char` array with length `size_t`. -    /// It's also not safe to build one from a `Vec<u16>` and its length, because -    /// the allocator cares about the alignment, and these two types have different -    /// alignments. The buffer was allocated with alignment 2 (for `u16`), but after -    /// turning it into a `Vec<u8>` it'll be deallocated with alignment 1. -    /// -    /// The ownership of `ptr` is effectively transferred to the -    /// `Vec<T>` which may then deallocate, reallocate or change the -    /// contents of memory pointed to by the pointer at will. Ensure -    /// that nothing else uses the pointer after calling this -    /// function. -    /// -    /// [`String`]: crate::string::String -    /// [`dealloc`]: crate::alloc::GlobalAlloc::dealloc -    /// [*currently allocated*]: crate::alloc::Allocator#currently-allocated-memory -    /// [*fit*]: crate::alloc::Allocator#memory-fitting -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(allocator_api)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::System; -    /// -    /// use std::ptr; -    /// use std::mem; -    /// -    /// let mut v = Vec::with_capacity_in(3, System); -    /// v.push(1); -    /// v.push(2); -    /// v.push(3); -    /// -    // FIXME Update this when vec_into_raw_parts is stabilized -    /// // Prevent running `v`'s destructor so we are in complete control -    /// // of the allocation. -    /// let mut v = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(v); -    /// -    /// // Pull out the various important pieces of information about `v` -    /// let p = v.as_mut_ptr(); -    /// let len = v.len(); -    /// let cap = v.capacity(); -    /// let alloc = v.allocator(); -    /// -    /// unsafe { -    ///     // Overwrite memory with 4, 5, 6 -    ///     for i in 0..len { -    ///         ptr::write(p.add(i), 4 + i); -    ///     } -    /// -    ///     // Put everything back together into a Vec -    ///     let rebuilt = Vec::from_raw_parts_in(p, len, cap, alloc.clone()); -    ///     assert_eq!(rebuilt, [4, 5, 6]); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Using memory that was allocated elsewhere: -    /// -    /// ```rust -    /// #![feature(allocator_api)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::{AllocError, Allocator, Global, Layout}; -    /// -    /// fn main() { -    ///     let layout = Layout::array::<u32>(16).expect("overflow cannot happen"); -    /// -    ///     let vec = unsafe { -    ///         let mem = match Global.allocate(layout) { -    ///             Ok(mem) => mem.cast::<u32>().as_ptr(), -    ///             Err(AllocError) => return, -    ///         }; -    /// -    ///         mem.write(1_000_000); -    /// -    ///         Vec::from_raw_parts_in(mem, 1, 16, Global) -    ///     }; -    /// -    ///     assert_eq!(vec, &[1_000_000]); -    ///     assert_eq!(vec.capacity(), 16); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    pub unsafe fn from_raw_parts_in(ptr: *mut T, length: usize, capacity: usize, alloc: A) -> Self { -        unsafe { Vec { buf: RawVec::from_raw_parts_in(ptr, capacity, alloc), len: length } } -    } - -    /// Decomposes a `Vec<T>` into its raw components. -    /// -    /// Returns the raw pointer to the underlying data, the length of -    /// the vector (in elements), and the allocated capacity of the -    /// data (in elements). These are the same arguments in the same -    /// order as the arguments to [`from_raw_parts`]. -    /// -    /// After calling this function, the caller is responsible for the -    /// memory previously managed by the `Vec`. The only way to do -    /// this is to convert the raw pointer, length, and capacity back -    /// into a `Vec` with the [`from_raw_parts`] function, allowing -    /// the destructor to perform the cleanup. -    /// -    /// [`from_raw_parts`]: Vec::from_raw_parts -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(vec_into_raw_parts)] -    /// let v: Vec<i32> = vec![-1, 0, 1]; -    /// -    /// let (ptr, len, cap) = v.into_raw_parts(); -    /// -    /// let rebuilt = unsafe { -    ///     // We can now make changes to the components, such as -    ///     // transmuting the raw pointer to a compatible type. -    ///     let ptr = ptr as *mut u32; -    /// -    ///     Vec::from_raw_parts(ptr, len, cap) -    /// }; -    /// assert_eq!(rebuilt, [4294967295, 0, 1]); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "vec_into_raw_parts", reason = "new API", issue = "65816")] -    pub fn into_raw_parts(self) -> (*mut T, usize, usize) { -        let mut me = ManuallyDrop::new(self); -        (me.as_mut_ptr(), me.len(), me.capacity()) -    } - -    /// Decomposes a `Vec<T>` into its raw components. -    /// -    /// Returns the raw pointer to the underlying data, the length of the vector (in elements), -    /// the allocated capacity of the data (in elements), and the allocator. These are the same -    /// arguments in the same order as the arguments to [`from_raw_parts_in`]. -    /// -    /// After calling this function, the caller is responsible for the -    /// memory previously managed by the `Vec`. The only way to do -    /// this is to convert the raw pointer, length, and capacity back -    /// into a `Vec` with the [`from_raw_parts_in`] function, allowing -    /// the destructor to perform the cleanup. -    /// -    /// [`from_raw_parts_in`]: Vec::from_raw_parts_in -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(allocator_api, vec_into_raw_parts)] -    /// -    /// use std::alloc::System; -    /// -    /// let mut v: Vec<i32, System> = Vec::new_in(System); -    /// v.push(-1); -    /// v.push(0); -    /// v.push(1); -    /// -    /// let (ptr, len, cap, alloc) = v.into_raw_parts_with_alloc(); -    /// -    /// let rebuilt = unsafe { -    ///     // We can now make changes to the components, such as -    ///     // transmuting the raw pointer to a compatible type. -    ///     let ptr = ptr as *mut u32; -    /// -    ///     Vec::from_raw_parts_in(ptr, len, cap, alloc) -    /// }; -    /// assert_eq!(rebuilt, [4294967295, 0, 1]); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    // #[unstable(feature = "vec_into_raw_parts", reason = "new API", issue = "65816")] -    pub fn into_raw_parts_with_alloc(self) -> (*mut T, usize, usize, A) { -        let mut me = ManuallyDrop::new(self); -        let len = me.len(); -        let capacity = me.capacity(); -        let ptr = me.as_mut_ptr(); -        let alloc = unsafe { ptr::read(me.allocator()) }; -        (ptr, len, capacity, alloc) -    } - -    /// Returns the total number of elements the vector can hold without -    /// reallocating. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec: Vec<i32> = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// vec.push(42); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn capacity(&self) -> usize { -        self.buf.capacity() -    } - -    /// Reserves capacity for at least `additional` more elements to be inserted -    /// in the given `Vec<T>`. The collection may reserve more space to -    /// speculatively avoid frequent reallocations. After calling `reserve`, -    /// capacity will be greater than or equal to `self.len() + additional`. -    /// Does nothing if capacity is already sufficient. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1]; -    /// vec.reserve(10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) { -        self.buf.reserve(self.len, additional); -    } - -    /// Reserves the minimum capacity for at least `additional` more elements to -    /// be inserted in the given `Vec<T>`. Unlike [`reserve`], this will not -    /// deliberately over-allocate to speculatively avoid frequent allocations. -    /// After calling `reserve_exact`, capacity will be greater than or equal to -    /// `self.len() + additional`. Does nothing if the capacity is already -    /// sufficient. -    /// -    /// Note that the allocator may give the collection more space than it -    /// requests. Therefore, capacity can not be relied upon to be precisely -    /// minimal. Prefer [`reserve`] if future insertions are expected. -    /// -    /// [`reserve`]: Vec::reserve -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1]; -    /// vec.reserve_exact(10); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 11); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn reserve_exact(&mut self, additional: usize) { -        self.buf.reserve_exact(self.len, additional); -    } - -    /// Tries to reserve capacity for at least `additional` more elements to be inserted -    /// in the given `Vec<T>`. The collection may reserve more space to speculatively avoid -    /// frequent reallocations. After calling `try_reserve`, capacity will be -    /// greater than or equal to `self.len() + additional` if it returns -    /// `Ok(())`. Does nothing if capacity is already sufficient. This method -    /// preserves the contents even if an error occurs. -    /// -    /// # Errors -    /// -    /// If the capacity overflows, or the allocator reports a failure, then an error -    /// is returned. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// use std::collections::TryReserveError; -    /// -    /// fn process_data(data: &[u32]) -> Result<Vec<u32>, TryReserveError> { -    ///     let mut output = Vec::new(); -    /// -    ///     // Pre-reserve the memory, exiting if we can't -    ///     output.try_reserve(data.len())?; -    /// -    ///     // Now we know this can't OOM in the middle of our complex work -    ///     output.extend(data.iter().map(|&val| { -    ///         val * 2 + 5 // very complicated -    ///     })); -    /// -    ///     Ok(output) -    /// } -    /// # process_data(&[1, 2, 3]).expect("why is the test harness OOMing on 12 bytes?"); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "try_reserve", since = "1.57.0")] -    pub fn try_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.buf.try_reserve(self.len, additional) -    } - -    /// Tries to reserve the minimum capacity for at least `additional` -    /// elements to be inserted in the given `Vec<T>`. Unlike [`try_reserve`], -    /// this will not deliberately over-allocate to speculatively avoid frequent -    /// allocations. After calling `try_reserve_exact`, capacity will be greater -    /// than or equal to `self.len() + additional` if it returns `Ok(())`. -    /// Does nothing if the capacity is already sufficient. -    /// -    /// Note that the allocator may give the collection more space than it -    /// requests. Therefore, capacity can not be relied upon to be precisely -    /// minimal. Prefer [`try_reserve`] if future insertions are expected. -    /// -    /// [`try_reserve`]: Vec::try_reserve -    /// -    /// # Errors -    /// -    /// If the capacity overflows, or the allocator reports a failure, then an error -    /// is returned. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// use std::collections::TryReserveError; -    /// -    /// fn process_data(data: &[u32]) -> Result<Vec<u32>, TryReserveError> { -    ///     let mut output = Vec::new(); -    /// -    ///     // Pre-reserve the memory, exiting if we can't -    ///     output.try_reserve_exact(data.len())?; -    /// -    ///     // Now we know this can't OOM in the middle of our complex work -    ///     output.extend(data.iter().map(|&val| { -    ///         val * 2 + 5 // very complicated -    ///     })); -    /// -    ///     Ok(output) -    /// } -    /// # process_data(&[1, 2, 3]).expect("why is the test harness OOMing on 12 bytes?"); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "try_reserve", since = "1.57.0")] -    pub fn try_reserve_exact(&mut self, additional: usize) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.buf.try_reserve_exact(self.len, additional) -    } - -    /// Shrinks the capacity of the vector as much as possible. -    /// -    /// It will drop down as close as possible to the length but the allocator -    /// may still inform the vector that there is space for a few more elements. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// vec.extend([1, 2, 3]); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// vec.shrink_to_fit(); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 3); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn shrink_to_fit(&mut self) { -        // The capacity is never less than the length, and there's nothing to do when -        // they are equal, so we can avoid the panic case in `RawVec::shrink_to_fit` -        // by only calling it with a greater capacity. -        if self.capacity() > self.len { -            self.buf.shrink_to_fit(self.len); -        } -    } - -    /// Shrinks the capacity of the vector with a lower bound. -    /// -    /// The capacity will remain at least as large as both the length -    /// and the supplied value. -    /// -    /// If the current capacity is less than the lower limit, this is a no-op. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// vec.extend([1, 2, 3]); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// vec.shrink_to(4); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 4); -    /// vec.shrink_to(0); -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 3); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "shrink_to", since = "1.56.0")] -    pub fn shrink_to(&mut self, min_capacity: usize) { -        if self.capacity() > min_capacity { -            self.buf.shrink_to_fit(cmp::max(self.len, min_capacity)); -        } -    } - -    /// Converts the vector into [`Box<[T]>`][owned slice]. -    /// -    /// If the vector has excess capacity, its items will be moved into a -    /// newly-allocated buffer with exactly the right capacity. -    /// -    /// [owned slice]: Box -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// -    /// let slice = v.into_boxed_slice(); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Any excess capacity is removed: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// vec.extend([1, 2, 3]); -    /// -    /// assert!(vec.capacity() >= 10); -    /// let slice = vec.into_boxed_slice(); -    /// assert_eq!(slice.into_vec().capacity(), 3); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn into_boxed_slice(mut self) -> Box<[T], A> { -        unsafe { -            self.shrink_to_fit(); -            let me = ManuallyDrop::new(self); -            let buf = ptr::read(&me.buf); -            let len = me.len(); -            buf.into_box(len).assume_init() -        } -    } - -    /// Shortens the vector, keeping the first `len` elements and dropping -    /// the rest. -    /// -    /// If `len` is greater or equal to the vector's current length, this has -    /// no effect. -    /// -    /// The [`drain`] method can emulate `truncate`, but causes the excess -    /// elements to be returned instead of dropped. -    /// -    /// Note that this method has no effect on the allocated capacity -    /// of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// Truncating a five element vector to two elements: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; -    /// vec.truncate(2); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// No truncation occurs when `len` is greater than the vector's current -    /// length: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// vec.truncate(8); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Truncating when `len == 0` is equivalent to calling the [`clear`] -    /// method. -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// vec.truncate(0); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, []); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// [`clear`]: Vec::clear -    /// [`drain`]: Vec::drain -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn truncate(&mut self, len: usize) { -        // This is safe because: -        // -        // * the slice passed to `drop_in_place` is valid; the `len > self.len` -        //   case avoids creating an invalid slice, and -        // * the `len` of the vector is shrunk before calling `drop_in_place`, -        //   such that no value will be dropped twice in case `drop_in_place` -        //   were to panic once (if it panics twice, the program aborts). -        unsafe { -            // Note: It's intentional that this is `>` and not `>=`. -            //       Changing it to `>=` has negative performance -            //       implications in some cases. See #78884 for more. -            if len > self.len { -                return; -            } -            let remaining_len = self.len - len; -            let s = ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(self.as_mut_ptr().add(len), remaining_len); -            self.len = len; -            ptr::drop_in_place(s); -        } -    } - -    /// Extracts a slice containing the entire vector. -    /// -    /// Equivalent to `&s[..]`. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// use std::io::{self, Write}; -    /// let buffer = vec![1, 2, 3, 5, 8]; -    /// io::sink().write(buffer.as_slice()).unwrap(); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_as_slice", since = "1.7.0")] -    pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T] { -        self -    } - -    /// Extracts a mutable slice of the entire vector. -    /// -    /// Equivalent to `&mut s[..]`. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// use std::io::{self, Read}; -    /// let mut buffer = vec![0; 3]; -    /// io::repeat(0b101).read_exact(buffer.as_mut_slice()).unwrap(); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_as_slice", since = "1.7.0")] -    pub fn as_mut_slice(&mut self) -> &mut [T] { -        self -    } - -    /// Returns a raw pointer to the vector's buffer, or a dangling raw pointer -    /// valid for zero sized reads if the vector didn't allocate. -    /// -    /// The caller must ensure that the vector outlives the pointer this -    /// function returns, or else it will end up pointing to garbage. -    /// Modifying the vector may cause its buffer to be reallocated, -    /// which would also make any pointers to it invalid. -    /// -    /// The caller must also ensure that the memory the pointer (non-transitively) points to -    /// is never written to (except inside an `UnsafeCell`) using this pointer or any pointer -    /// derived from it. If you need to mutate the contents of the slice, use [`as_mut_ptr`]. -    /// -    /// This method guarantees that for the purpose of the aliasing model, this method -    /// does not materialize a reference to the underlying slice, and thus the returned pointer -    /// will remain valid when mixed with other calls to [`as_ptr`] and [`as_mut_ptr`]. -    /// Note that calling other methods that materialize mutable references to the slice, -    /// or mutable references to specific elements you are planning on accessing through this pointer, -    /// as well as writing to those elements, may still invalidate this pointer. -    /// See the second example below for how this guarantee can be used. -    /// -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let x = vec![1, 2, 4]; -    /// let x_ptr = x.as_ptr(); -    /// -    /// unsafe { -    ///     for i in 0..x.len() { -    ///         assert_eq!(*x_ptr.add(i), 1 << i); -    ///     } -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Due to the aliasing guarantee, the following code is legal: -    /// -    /// ```rust -    /// unsafe { -    ///     let mut v = vec![0, 1, 2]; -    ///     let ptr1 = v.as_ptr(); -    ///     let _ = ptr1.read(); -    ///     let ptr2 = v.as_mut_ptr().offset(2); -    ///     ptr2.write(2); -    ///     // Notably, the write to `ptr2` did *not* invalidate `ptr1` -    ///     // because it mutated a different element: -    ///     let _ = ptr1.read(); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// [`as_mut_ptr`]: Vec::as_mut_ptr -    /// [`as_ptr`]: Vec::as_ptr -    #[stable(feature = "vec_as_ptr", since = "1.37.0")] -    #[rustc_never_returns_null_ptr] -    #[inline] -    pub fn as_ptr(&self) -> *const T { -        // We shadow the slice method of the same name to avoid going through -        // `deref`, which creates an intermediate reference. -        self.buf.ptr() -    } - -    /// Returns an unsafe mutable pointer to the vector's buffer, or a dangling -    /// raw pointer valid for zero sized reads if the vector didn't allocate. -    /// -    /// The caller must ensure that the vector outlives the pointer this -    /// function returns, or else it will end up pointing to garbage. -    /// Modifying the vector may cause its buffer to be reallocated, -    /// which would also make any pointers to it invalid. -    /// -    /// This method guarantees that for the purpose of the aliasing model, this method -    /// does not materialize a reference to the underlying slice, and thus the returned pointer -    /// will remain valid when mixed with other calls to [`as_ptr`] and [`as_mut_ptr`]. -    /// Note that calling other methods that materialize references to the slice, -    /// or references to specific elements you are planning on accessing through this pointer, -    /// may still invalidate this pointer. -    /// See the second example below for how this guarantee can be used. -    /// -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// // Allocate vector big enough for 4 elements. -    /// let size = 4; -    /// let mut x: Vec<i32> = Vec::with_capacity(size); -    /// let x_ptr = x.as_mut_ptr(); -    /// -    /// // Initialize elements via raw pointer writes, then set length. -    /// unsafe { -    ///     for i in 0..size { -    ///         *x_ptr.add(i) = i as i32; -    ///     } -    ///     x.set_len(size); -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(&*x, &[0, 1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Due to the aliasing guarantee, the following code is legal: -    /// -    /// ```rust -    /// unsafe { -    ///     let mut v = vec![0]; -    ///     let ptr1 = v.as_mut_ptr(); -    ///     ptr1.write(1); -    ///     let ptr2 = v.as_mut_ptr(); -    ///     ptr2.write(2); -    ///     // Notably, the write to `ptr2` did *not* invalidate `ptr1`: -    ///     ptr1.write(3); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// [`as_mut_ptr`]: Vec::as_mut_ptr -    /// [`as_ptr`]: Vec::as_ptr -    #[stable(feature = "vec_as_ptr", since = "1.37.0")] -    #[rustc_never_returns_null_ptr] -    #[inline] -    pub fn as_mut_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut T { -        // We shadow the slice method of the same name to avoid going through -        // `deref_mut`, which creates an intermediate reference. -        self.buf.ptr() -    } - -    /// Returns a reference to the underlying allocator. -    #[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn allocator(&self) -> &A { -        self.buf.allocator() -    } - -    /// Forces the length of the vector to `new_len`. -    /// -    /// This is a low-level operation that maintains none of the normal -    /// invariants of the type. Normally changing the length of a vector -    /// is done using one of the safe operations instead, such as -    /// [`truncate`], [`resize`], [`extend`], or [`clear`]. -    /// -    /// [`truncate`]: Vec::truncate -    /// [`resize`]: Vec::resize -    /// [`extend`]: Extend::extend -    /// [`clear`]: Vec::clear -    /// -    /// # Safety -    /// -    /// - `new_len` must be less than or equal to [`capacity()`]. -    /// - The elements at `old_len..new_len` must be initialized. -    /// -    /// [`capacity()`]: Vec::capacity -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// This method can be useful for situations in which the vector -    /// is serving as a buffer for other code, particularly over FFI: -    /// -    /// ```no_run -    /// # #![allow(dead_code)] -    /// # // This is just a minimal skeleton for the doc example; -    /// # // don't use this as a starting point for a real library. -    /// # pub struct StreamWrapper { strm: *mut std::ffi::c_void } -    /// # const Z_OK: i32 = 0; -    /// # extern "C" { -    /// #     fn deflateGetDictionary( -    /// #         strm: *mut std::ffi::c_void, -    /// #         dictionary: *mut u8, -    /// #         dictLength: *mut usize, -    /// #     ) -> i32; -    /// # } -    /// # impl StreamWrapper { -    /// pub fn get_dictionary(&self) -> Option<Vec<u8>> { -    ///     // Per the FFI method's docs, "32768 bytes is always enough". -    ///     let mut dict = Vec::with_capacity(32_768); -    ///     let mut dict_length = 0; -    ///     // SAFETY: When `deflateGetDictionary` returns `Z_OK`, it holds that: -    ///     // 1. `dict_length` elements were initialized. -    ///     // 2. `dict_length` <= the capacity (32_768) -    ///     // which makes `set_len` safe to call. -    ///     unsafe { -    ///         // Make the FFI call... -    ///         let r = deflateGetDictionary(self.strm, dict.as_mut_ptr(), &mut dict_length); -    ///         if r == Z_OK { -    ///             // ...and update the length to what was initialized. -    ///             dict.set_len(dict_length); -    ///             Some(dict) -    ///         } else { -    ///             None -    ///         } -    ///     } -    /// } -    /// # } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// While the following example is sound, there is a memory leak since -    /// the inner vectors were not freed prior to the `set_len` call: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![vec![1, 0, 0], -    ///                    vec![0, 1, 0], -    ///                    vec![0, 0, 1]]; -    /// // SAFETY: -    /// // 1. `old_len..0` is empty so no elements need to be initialized. -    /// // 2. `0 <= capacity` always holds whatever `capacity` is. -    /// unsafe { -    ///     vec.set_len(0); -    /// } -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Normally, here, one would use [`clear`] instead to correctly drop -    /// the contents and thus not leak memory. -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub unsafe fn set_len(&mut self, new_len: usize) { -        debug_assert!(new_len <= self.capacity()); - -        self.len = new_len; -    } - -    /// Removes an element from the vector and returns it. -    /// -    /// The removed element is replaced by the last element of the vector. -    /// -    /// This does not preserve ordering, but is *O*(1). -    /// If you need to preserve the element order, use [`remove`] instead. -    /// -    /// [`remove`]: Vec::remove -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if `index` is out of bounds. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = vec!["foo", "bar", "baz", "qux"]; -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(v.swap_remove(1), "bar"); -    /// assert_eq!(v, ["foo", "qux", "baz"]); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(v.swap_remove(0), "foo"); -    /// assert_eq!(v, ["baz", "qux"]); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn swap_remove(&mut self, index: usize) -> T { -        #[cold] -        #[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never))] -        #[track_caller] -        fn assert_failed(index: usize, len: usize) -> ! { -            panic!("swap_remove index (is {index}) should be < len (is {len})"); -        } - -        let len = self.len(); -        if index >= len { -            assert_failed(index, len); -        } -        unsafe { -            // We replace self[index] with the last element. Note that if the -            // bounds check above succeeds there must be a last element (which -            // can be self[index] itself). -            let value = ptr::read(self.as_ptr().add(index)); -            let base_ptr = self.as_mut_ptr(); -            ptr::copy(base_ptr.add(len - 1), base_ptr.add(index), 1); -            self.set_len(len - 1); -            value -        } -    } - -    /// Inserts an element at position `index` within the vector, shifting all -    /// elements after it to the right. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if `index > len`. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// vec.insert(1, 4); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 4, 2, 3]); -    /// vec.insert(4, 5); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 4, 2, 3, 5]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn insert(&mut self, index: usize, element: T) { -        #[cold] -        #[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never))] -        #[track_caller] -        fn assert_failed(index: usize, len: usize) -> ! { -            panic!("insertion index (is {index}) should be <= len (is {len})"); -        } - -        let len = self.len(); - -        // space for the new element -        if len == self.buf.capacity() { -            self.reserve(1); -        } - -        unsafe { -            // infallible -            // The spot to put the new value -            { -                let p = self.as_mut_ptr().add(index); -                if index < len { -                    // Shift everything over to make space. (Duplicating the -                    // `index`th element into two consecutive places.) -                    ptr::copy(p, p.add(1), len - index); -                } else if index == len { -                    // No elements need shifting. -                } else { -                    assert_failed(index, len); -                } -                // Write it in, overwriting the first copy of the `index`th -                // element. -                ptr::write(p, element); -            } -            self.set_len(len + 1); -        } -    } - -    /// Removes and returns the element at position `index` within the vector, -    /// shifting all elements after it to the left. -    /// -    /// Note: Because this shifts over the remaining elements, it has a -    /// worst-case performance of *O*(*n*). If you don't need the order of elements -    /// to be preserved, use [`swap_remove`] instead. If you'd like to remove -    /// elements from the beginning of the `Vec`, consider using -    /// [`VecDeque::pop_front`] instead. -    /// -    /// [`swap_remove`]: Vec::swap_remove -    /// [`VecDeque::pop_front`]: crate::collections::VecDeque::pop_front -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if `index` is out of bounds. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// assert_eq!(v.remove(1), 2); -    /// assert_eq!(v, [1, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    #[track_caller] -    pub fn remove(&mut self, index: usize) -> T { -        #[cold] -        #[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never))] -        #[track_caller] -        fn assert_failed(index: usize, len: usize) -> ! { -            panic!("removal index (is {index}) should be < len (is {len})"); -        } - -        let len = self.len(); -        if index >= len { -            assert_failed(index, len); -        } -        unsafe { -            // infallible -            let ret; -            { -                // the place we are taking from. -                let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr().add(index); -                // copy it out, unsafely having a copy of the value on -                // the stack and in the vector at the same time. -                ret = ptr::read(ptr); - -                // Shift everything down to fill in that spot. -                ptr::copy(ptr.add(1), ptr, len - index - 1); -            } -            self.set_len(len - 1); -            ret -        } -    } - -    /// Retains only the elements specified by the predicate. -    /// -    /// In other words, remove all elements `e` for which `f(&e)` returns `false`. -    /// This method operates in place, visiting each element exactly once in the -    /// original order, and preserves the order of the retained elements. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// vec.retain(|&x| x % 2 == 0); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [2, 4]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Because the elements are visited exactly once in the original order, -    /// external state may be used to decide which elements to keep. -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; -    /// let keep = [false, true, true, false, true]; -    /// let mut iter = keep.iter(); -    /// vec.retain(|_| *iter.next().unwrap()); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [2, 3, 5]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn retain<F>(&mut self, mut f: F) -    where -        F: FnMut(&T) -> bool, -    { -        self.retain_mut(|elem| f(elem)); -    } - -    /// Retains only the elements specified by the predicate, passing a mutable reference to it. -    /// -    /// In other words, remove all elements `e` such that `f(&mut e)` returns `false`. -    /// This method operates in place, visiting each element exactly once in the -    /// original order, and preserves the order of the retained elements. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// vec.retain_mut(|x| if *x <= 3 { -    ///     *x += 1; -    ///     true -    /// } else { -    ///     false -    /// }); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [2, 3, 4]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "vec_retain_mut", since = "1.61.0")] -    pub fn retain_mut<F>(&mut self, mut f: F) -    where -        F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -    { -        let original_len = self.len(); -        // Avoid double drop if the drop guard is not executed, -        // since we may make some holes during the process. -        unsafe { self.set_len(0) }; - -        // Vec: [Kept, Kept, Hole, Hole, Hole, Hole, Unchecked, Unchecked] -        //      |<-              processed len   ->| ^- next to check -        //                  |<-  deleted cnt     ->| -        //      |<-              original_len                          ->| -        // Kept: Elements which predicate returns true on. -        // Hole: Moved or dropped element slot. -        // Unchecked: Unchecked valid elements. -        // -        // This drop guard will be invoked when predicate or `drop` of element panicked. -        // It shifts unchecked elements to cover holes and `set_len` to the correct length. -        // In cases when predicate and `drop` never panick, it will be optimized out. -        struct BackshiftOnDrop<'a, T, A: Allocator> { -            v: &'a mut Vec<T, A>, -            processed_len: usize, -            deleted_cnt: usize, -            original_len: usize, -        } - -        impl<T, A: Allocator> Drop for BackshiftOnDrop<'_, T, A> { -            fn drop(&mut self) { -                if self.deleted_cnt > 0 { -                    // SAFETY: Trailing unchecked items must be valid since we never touch them. -                    unsafe { -                        ptr::copy( -                            self.v.as_ptr().add(self.processed_len), -                            self.v.as_mut_ptr().add(self.processed_len - self.deleted_cnt), -                            self.original_len - self.processed_len, -                        ); -                    } -                } -                // SAFETY: After filling holes, all items are in contiguous memory. -                unsafe { -                    self.v.set_len(self.original_len - self.deleted_cnt); -                } -            } -        } - -        let mut g = BackshiftOnDrop { v: self, processed_len: 0, deleted_cnt: 0, original_len }; - -        fn process_loop<F, T, A: Allocator, const DELETED: bool>( -            original_len: usize, -            f: &mut F, -            g: &mut BackshiftOnDrop<'_, T, A>, -        ) where -            F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -        { -            while g.processed_len != original_len { -                // SAFETY: Unchecked element must be valid. -                let cur = unsafe { &mut *g.v.as_mut_ptr().add(g.processed_len) }; -                if !f(cur) { -                    // Advance early to avoid double drop if `drop_in_place` panicked. -                    g.processed_len += 1; -                    g.deleted_cnt += 1; -                    // SAFETY: We never touch this element again after dropped. -                    unsafe { ptr::drop_in_place(cur) }; -                    // We already advanced the counter. -                    if DELETED { -                        continue; -                    } else { -                        break; -                    } -                } -                if DELETED { -                    // SAFETY: `deleted_cnt` > 0, so the hole slot must not overlap with current element. -                    // We use copy for move, and never touch this element again. -                    unsafe { -                        let hole_slot = g.v.as_mut_ptr().add(g.processed_len - g.deleted_cnt); -                        ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(cur, hole_slot, 1); -                    } -                } -                g.processed_len += 1; -            } -        } - -        // Stage 1: Nothing was deleted. -        process_loop::<F, T, A, false>(original_len, &mut f, &mut g); - -        // Stage 2: Some elements were deleted. -        process_loop::<F, T, A, true>(original_len, &mut f, &mut g); - -        // All item are processed. This can be optimized to `set_len` by LLVM. -        drop(g); -    } - -    /// Removes all but the first of consecutive elements in the vector that resolve to the same -    /// key. -    /// -    /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![10, 20, 21, 30, 20]; -    /// -    /// vec.dedup_by_key(|i| *i / 10); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [10, 20, 30, 20]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "dedup_by", since = "1.16.0")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn dedup_by_key<F, K>(&mut self, mut key: F) -    where -        F: FnMut(&mut T) -> K, -        K: PartialEq, -    { -        self.dedup_by(|a, b| key(a) == key(b)) -    } - -    /// Removes all but the first of consecutive elements in the vector satisfying a given equality -    /// relation. -    /// -    /// The `same_bucket` function is passed references to two elements from the vector and -    /// must determine if the elements compare equal. The elements are passed in opposite order -    /// from their order in the slice, so if `same_bucket(a, b)` returns `true`, `a` is removed. -    /// -    /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec!["foo", "bar", "Bar", "baz", "bar"]; -    /// -    /// vec.dedup_by(|a, b| a.eq_ignore_ascii_case(b)); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(vec, ["foo", "bar", "baz", "bar"]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "dedup_by", since = "1.16.0")] -    pub fn dedup_by<F>(&mut self, mut same_bucket: F) -    where -        F: FnMut(&mut T, &mut T) -> bool, -    { -        let len = self.len(); -        if len <= 1 { -            return; -        } - -        // Check if we ever want to remove anything. -        // This allows to use copy_non_overlapping in next cycle. -        // And avoids any memory writes if we don't need to remove anything. -        let mut first_duplicate_idx: usize = 1; -        let start = self.as_mut_ptr(); -        while first_duplicate_idx != len { -            let found_duplicate = unsafe { -                // SAFETY: first_duplicate always in range [1..len) -                // Note that we start iteration from 1 so we never overflow. -                let prev = start.add(first_duplicate_idx.wrapping_sub(1)); -                let current = start.add(first_duplicate_idx); -                // We explicitly say in docs that references are reversed. -                same_bucket(&mut *current, &mut *prev) -            }; -            if found_duplicate { -                break; -            } -            first_duplicate_idx += 1; -        } -        // Don't need to remove anything. -        // We cannot get bigger than len. -        if first_duplicate_idx == len { -            return; -        } - -        /* INVARIANT: vec.len() > read > write > write-1 >= 0 */ -        struct FillGapOnDrop<'a, T, A: core::alloc::Allocator> { -            /* Offset of the element we want to check if it is duplicate */ -            read: usize, - -            /* Offset of the place where we want to place the non-duplicate -             * when we find it. */ -            write: usize, - -            /* The Vec that would need correction if `same_bucket` panicked */ -            vec: &'a mut Vec<T, A>, -        } - -        impl<'a, T, A: core::alloc::Allocator> Drop for FillGapOnDrop<'a, T, A> { -            fn drop(&mut self) { -                /* This code gets executed when `same_bucket` panics */ - -                /* SAFETY: invariant guarantees that `read - write` -                 * and `len - read` never overflow and that the copy is always -                 * in-bounds. */ -                unsafe { -                    let ptr = self.vec.as_mut_ptr(); -                    let len = self.vec.len(); - -                    /* How many items were left when `same_bucket` panicked. -                     * Basically vec[read..].len() */ -                    let items_left = len.wrapping_sub(self.read); - -                    /* Pointer to first item in vec[write..write+items_left] slice */ -                    let dropped_ptr = ptr.add(self.write); -                    /* Pointer to first item in vec[read..] slice */ -                    let valid_ptr = ptr.add(self.read); - -                    /* Copy `vec[read..]` to `vec[write..write+items_left]`. -                     * The slices can overlap, so `copy_nonoverlapping` cannot be used */ -                    ptr::copy(valid_ptr, dropped_ptr, items_left); - -                    /* How many items have been already dropped -                     * Basically vec[read..write].len() */ -                    let dropped = self.read.wrapping_sub(self.write); - -                    self.vec.set_len(len - dropped); -                } -            } -        } - -        /* Drop items while going through Vec, it should be more efficient than -         * doing slice partition_dedup + truncate */ - -        // Construct gap first and then drop item to avoid memory corruption if `T::drop` panics. -        let mut gap = -            FillGapOnDrop { read: first_duplicate_idx + 1, write: first_duplicate_idx, vec: self }; -        unsafe { -            // SAFETY: we checked that first_duplicate_idx in bounds before. -            // If drop panics, `gap` would remove this item without drop. -            ptr::drop_in_place(start.add(first_duplicate_idx)); -        } - -        /* SAFETY: Because of the invariant, read_ptr, prev_ptr and write_ptr -         * are always in-bounds and read_ptr never aliases prev_ptr */ -        unsafe { -            while gap.read < len { -                let read_ptr = start.add(gap.read); -                let prev_ptr = start.add(gap.write.wrapping_sub(1)); - -                // We explicitly say in docs that references are reversed. -                let found_duplicate = same_bucket(&mut *read_ptr, &mut *prev_ptr); -                if found_duplicate { -                    // Increase `gap.read` now since the drop may panic. -                    gap.read += 1; -                    /* We have found duplicate, drop it in-place */ -                    ptr::drop_in_place(read_ptr); -                } else { -                    let write_ptr = start.add(gap.write); - -                    /* read_ptr cannot be equal to write_ptr because at this point -                     * we guaranteed to skip at least one element (before loop starts). -                     */ -                    ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(read_ptr, write_ptr, 1); - -                    /* We have filled that place, so go further */ -                    gap.write += 1; -                    gap.read += 1; -                } -            } - -            /* Technically we could let `gap` clean up with its Drop, but -             * when `same_bucket` is guaranteed to not panic, this bloats a little -             * the codegen, so we just do it manually */ -            gap.vec.set_len(gap.write); -            mem::forget(gap); -        } -    } - -    /// Appends an element to the back of a collection. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2]; -    /// vec.push(3); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn push(&mut self, value: T) { -        // This will panic or abort if we would allocate > isize::MAX bytes -        // or if the length increment would overflow for zero-sized types. -        if self.len == self.buf.capacity() { -            self.buf.reserve_for_push(self.len); -        } -        unsafe { -            let end = self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len); -            ptr::write(end, value); -            self.len += 1; -        } -    } - -    /// Tries to append an element to the back of a collection. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2]; -    /// vec.try_push(3).unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "kernel", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn try_push(&mut self, value: T) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        if self.len == self.buf.capacity() { -            self.buf.try_reserve_for_push(self.len)?; -        } -        unsafe { -            let end = self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len); -            ptr::write(end, value); -            self.len += 1; -        } -        Ok(()) -    } - -    /// Appends an element if there is sufficient spare capacity, otherwise an error is returned -    /// with the element. -    /// -    /// Unlike [`push`] this method will not reallocate when there's insufficient capacity. -    /// The caller should use [`reserve`] or [`try_reserve`] to ensure that there is enough capacity. -    /// -    /// [`push`]: Vec::push -    /// [`reserve`]: Vec::reserve -    /// [`try_reserve`]: Vec::try_reserve -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// A manual, panic-free alternative to [`FromIterator`]: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(vec_push_within_capacity)] -    /// -    /// use std::collections::TryReserveError; -    /// fn from_iter_fallible<T>(iter: impl Iterator<Item=T>) -> Result<Vec<T>, TryReserveError> { -    ///     let mut vec = Vec::new(); -    ///     for value in iter { -    ///         if let Err(value) = vec.push_within_capacity(value) { -    ///             vec.try_reserve(1)?; -    ///             // this cannot fail, the previous line either returned or added at least 1 free slot -    ///             let _ = vec.push_within_capacity(value); -    ///         } -    ///     } -    ///     Ok(vec) -    /// } -    /// assert_eq!(from_iter_fallible(0..100), Ok(Vec::from_iter(0..100))); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[unstable(feature = "vec_push_within_capacity", issue = "100486")] -    pub fn push_within_capacity(&mut self, value: T) -> Result<(), T> { -        if self.len == self.buf.capacity() { -            return Err(value); -        } -        unsafe { -            let end = self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len); -            ptr::write(end, value); -            self.len += 1; -        } -        Ok(()) -    } - -    /// Removes the last element from a vector and returns it, or [`None`] if it -    /// is empty. -    /// -    /// If you'd like to pop the first element, consider using -    /// [`VecDeque::pop_front`] instead. -    /// -    /// [`VecDeque::pop_front`]: crate::collections::VecDeque::pop_front -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// assert_eq!(vec.pop(), Some(3)); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2]); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn pop(&mut self) -> Option<T> { -        if self.len == 0 { -            None -        } else { -            unsafe { -                self.len -= 1; -                core::intrinsics::assume(self.len < self.capacity()); -                Some(ptr::read(self.as_ptr().add(self.len()))) -            } -        } -    } - -    /// Moves all the elements of `other` into `self`, leaving `other` empty. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the new capacity exceeds `isize::MAX` bytes. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// let mut vec2 = vec![4, 5, 6]; -    /// vec.append(&mut vec2); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]); -    /// assert_eq!(vec2, []); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "append", since = "1.4.0")] -    pub fn append(&mut self, other: &mut Self) { -        unsafe { -            self.append_elements(other.as_slice() as _); -            other.set_len(0); -        } -    } - -    /// Appends elements to `self` from other buffer. -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    unsafe fn append_elements(&mut self, other: *const [T]) { -        let count = unsafe { (*other).len() }; -        self.reserve(count); -        let len = self.len(); -        unsafe { ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(other as *const T, self.as_mut_ptr().add(len), count) }; -        self.len += count; -    } - -    /// Tries to append elements to `self` from other buffer. -    #[inline] -    unsafe fn try_append_elements(&mut self, other: *const [T]) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        let count = unsafe { (*other).len() }; -        self.try_reserve(count)?; -        let len = self.len(); -        unsafe { ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(other as *const T, self.as_mut_ptr().add(len), count) }; -        self.len += count; -        Ok(()) -    } - -    /// Removes the specified range from the vector in bulk, returning all -    /// removed elements as an iterator. If the iterator is dropped before -    /// being fully consumed, it drops the remaining removed elements. -    /// -    /// The returned iterator keeps a mutable borrow on the vector to optimize -    /// its implementation. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the starting point is greater than the end point or if -    /// the end point is greater than the length of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Leaking -    /// -    /// If the returned iterator goes out of scope without being dropped (due to -    /// [`mem::forget`], for example), the vector may have lost and leaked -    /// elements arbitrarily, including elements outside the range. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// let u: Vec<_> = v.drain(1..).collect(); -    /// assert_eq!(v, &[1]); -    /// assert_eq!(u, &[2, 3]); -    /// -    /// // A full range clears the vector, like `clear()` does -    /// v.drain(..); -    /// assert_eq!(v, &[]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "drain", since = "1.6.0")] -    pub fn drain<R>(&mut self, range: R) -> Drain<'_, T, A> -    where -        R: RangeBounds<usize>, -    { -        // Memory safety -        // -        // When the Drain is first created, it shortens the length of -        // the source vector to make sure no uninitialized or moved-from elements -        // are accessible at all if the Drain's destructor never gets to run. -        // -        // Drain will ptr::read out the values to remove. -        // When finished, remaining tail of the vec is copied back to cover -        // the hole, and the vector length is restored to the new length. -        // -        let len = self.len(); -        let Range { start, end } = slice::range(range, ..len); - -        unsafe { -            // set self.vec length's to start, to be safe in case Drain is leaked -            self.set_len(start); -            let range_slice = slice::from_raw_parts(self.as_ptr().add(start), end - start); -            Drain { -                tail_start: end, -                tail_len: len - end, -                iter: range_slice.iter(), -                vec: NonNull::from(self), -            } -        } -    } - -    /// Clears the vector, removing all values. -    /// -    /// Note that this method has no effect on the allocated capacity -    /// of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// -    /// v.clear(); -    /// -    /// assert!(v.is_empty()); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn clear(&mut self) { -        let elems: *mut [T] = self.as_mut_slice(); - -        // SAFETY: -        // - `elems` comes directly from `as_mut_slice` and is therefore valid. -        // - Setting `self.len` before calling `drop_in_place` means that, -        //   if an element's `Drop` impl panics, the vector's `Drop` impl will -        //   do nothing (leaking the rest of the elements) instead of dropping -        //   some twice. -        unsafe { -            self.len = 0; -            ptr::drop_in_place(elems); -        } -    } - -    /// Returns the number of elements in the vector, also referred to -    /// as its 'length'. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let a = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// assert_eq!(a.len(), 3); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn len(&self) -> usize { -        self.len -    } - -    /// Returns `true` if the vector contains no elements. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = Vec::new(); -    /// assert!(v.is_empty()); -    /// -    /// v.push(1); -    /// assert!(!v.is_empty()); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { -        self.len() == 0 -    } - -    /// Splits the collection into two at the given index. -    /// -    /// Returns a newly allocated vector containing the elements in the range -    /// `[at, len)`. After the call, the original vector will be left containing -    /// the elements `[0, at)` with its previous capacity unchanged. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if `at > len`. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// let vec2 = vec.split_off(1); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1]); -    /// assert_eq!(vec2, [2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[must_use = "use `.truncate()` if you don't need the other half"] -    #[stable(feature = "split_off", since = "1.4.0")] -    pub fn split_off(&mut self, at: usize) -> Self -    where -        A: Clone, -    { -        #[cold] -        #[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never))] -        #[track_caller] -        fn assert_failed(at: usize, len: usize) -> ! { -            panic!("`at` split index (is {at}) should be <= len (is {len})"); -        } - -        if at > self.len() { -            assert_failed(at, self.len()); -        } - -        if at == 0 { -            // the new vector can take over the original buffer and avoid the copy -            return mem::replace( -                self, -                Vec::with_capacity_in(self.capacity(), self.allocator().clone()), -            ); -        } - -        let other_len = self.len - at; -        let mut other = Vec::with_capacity_in(other_len, self.allocator().clone()); - -        // Unsafely `set_len` and copy items to `other`. -        unsafe { -            self.set_len(at); -            other.set_len(other_len); - -            ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(self.as_ptr().add(at), other.as_mut_ptr(), other.len()); -        } -        other -    } - -    /// Resizes the `Vec` in-place so that `len` is equal to `new_len`. -    /// -    /// If `new_len` is greater than `len`, the `Vec` is extended by the -    /// difference, with each additional slot filled with the result of -    /// calling the closure `f`. The return values from `f` will end up -    /// in the `Vec` in the order they have been generated. -    /// -    /// If `new_len` is less than `len`, the `Vec` is simply truncated. -    /// -    /// This method uses a closure to create new values on every push. If -    /// you'd rather [`Clone`] a given value, use [`Vec::resize`]. If you -    /// want to use the [`Default`] trait to generate values, you can -    /// pass [`Default::default`] as the second argument. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// vec.resize_with(5, Default::default); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 0, 0]); -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec![]; -    /// let mut p = 1; -    /// vec.resize_with(4, || { p *= 2; p }); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [2, 4, 8, 16]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_resize_with", since = "1.33.0")] -    pub fn resize_with<F>(&mut self, new_len: usize, f: F) -    where -        F: FnMut() -> T, -    { -        let len = self.len(); -        if new_len > len { -            self.extend_trusted(iter::repeat_with(f).take(new_len - len)); -        } else { -            self.truncate(new_len); -        } -    } - -    /// Consumes and leaks the `Vec`, returning a mutable reference to the contents, -    /// `&'a mut [T]`. Note that the type `T` must outlive the chosen lifetime -    /// `'a`. If the type has only static references, or none at all, then this -    /// may be chosen to be `'static`. -    /// -    /// As of Rust 1.57, this method does not reallocate or shrink the `Vec`, -    /// so the leaked allocation may include unused capacity that is not part -    /// of the returned slice. -    /// -    /// This function is mainly useful for data that lives for the remainder of -    /// the program's life. Dropping the returned reference will cause a memory -    /// leak. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// Simple usage: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let x = vec![1, 2, 3]; -    /// let static_ref: &'static mut [usize] = x.leak(); -    /// static_ref[0] += 1; -    /// assert_eq!(static_ref, &[2, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "vec_leak", since = "1.47.0")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn leak<'a>(self) -> &'a mut [T] -    where -        A: 'a, -    { -        let mut me = ManuallyDrop::new(self); -        unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts_mut(me.as_mut_ptr(), me.len) } -    } - -    /// Returns the remaining spare capacity of the vector as a slice of -    /// `MaybeUninit<T>`. -    /// -    /// The returned slice can be used to fill the vector with data (e.g. by -    /// reading from a file) before marking the data as initialized using the -    /// [`set_len`] method. -    /// -    /// [`set_len`]: Vec::set_len -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// // Allocate vector big enough for 10 elements. -    /// let mut v = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// -    /// // Fill in the first 3 elements. -    /// let uninit = v.spare_capacity_mut(); -    /// uninit[0].write(0); -    /// uninit[1].write(1); -    /// uninit[2].write(2); -    /// -    /// // Mark the first 3 elements of the vector as being initialized. -    /// unsafe { -    ///     v.set_len(3); -    /// } -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(&v, &[0, 1, 2]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "vec_spare_capacity", since = "1.60.0")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn spare_capacity_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [MaybeUninit<T>] { -        // Note: -        // This method is not implemented in terms of `split_at_spare_mut`, -        // to prevent invalidation of pointers to the buffer. -        unsafe { -            slice::from_raw_parts_mut( -                self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len) as *mut MaybeUninit<T>, -                self.buf.capacity() - self.len, -            ) -        } -    } - -    /// Returns vector content as a slice of `T`, along with the remaining spare -    /// capacity of the vector as a slice of `MaybeUninit<T>`. -    /// -    /// The returned spare capacity slice can be used to fill the vector with data -    /// (e.g. by reading from a file) before marking the data as initialized using -    /// the [`set_len`] method. -    /// -    /// [`set_len`]: Vec::set_len -    /// -    /// Note that this is a low-level API, which should be used with care for -    /// optimization purposes. If you need to append data to a `Vec` -    /// you can use [`push`], [`extend`], [`extend_from_slice`], -    /// [`extend_from_within`], [`insert`], [`append`], [`resize`] or -    /// [`resize_with`], depending on your exact needs. -    /// -    /// [`push`]: Vec::push -    /// [`extend`]: Vec::extend -    /// [`extend_from_slice`]: Vec::extend_from_slice -    /// [`extend_from_within`]: Vec::extend_from_within -    /// [`insert`]: Vec::insert -    /// [`append`]: Vec::append -    /// [`resize`]: Vec::resize -    /// [`resize_with`]: Vec::resize_with -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(vec_split_at_spare)] -    /// -    /// let mut v = vec![1, 1, 2]; -    /// -    /// // Reserve additional space big enough for 10 elements. -    /// v.reserve(10); -    /// -    /// let (init, uninit) = v.split_at_spare_mut(); -    /// let sum = init.iter().copied().sum::<u32>(); -    /// -    /// // Fill in the next 4 elements. -    /// uninit[0].write(sum); -    /// uninit[1].write(sum * 2); -    /// uninit[2].write(sum * 3); -    /// uninit[3].write(sum * 4); -    /// -    /// // Mark the 4 elements of the vector as being initialized. -    /// unsafe { -    ///     let len = v.len(); -    ///     v.set_len(len + 4); -    /// } -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(&v, &[1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 16]); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "vec_split_at_spare", issue = "81944")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn split_at_spare_mut(&mut self) -> (&mut [T], &mut [MaybeUninit<T>]) { -        // SAFETY: -        // - len is ignored and so never changed -        let (init, spare, _) = unsafe { self.split_at_spare_mut_with_len() }; -        (init, spare) -    } - -    /// Safety: changing returned .2 (&mut usize) is considered the same as calling `.set_len(_)`. -    /// -    /// This method provides unique access to all vec parts at once in `extend_from_within`. -    unsafe fn split_at_spare_mut_with_len( -        &mut self, -    ) -> (&mut [T], &mut [MaybeUninit<T>], &mut usize) { -        let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr(); -        // SAFETY: -        // - `ptr` is guaranteed to be valid for `self.len` elements -        // - but the allocation extends out to `self.buf.capacity()` elements, possibly -        // uninitialized -        let spare_ptr = unsafe { ptr.add(self.len) }; -        let spare_ptr = spare_ptr.cast::<MaybeUninit<T>>(); -        let spare_len = self.buf.capacity() - self.len; - -        // SAFETY: -        // - `ptr` is guaranteed to be valid for `self.len` elements -        // - `spare_ptr` is pointing one element past the buffer, so it doesn't overlap with `initialized` -        unsafe { -            let initialized = slice::from_raw_parts_mut(ptr, self.len); -            let spare = slice::from_raw_parts_mut(spare_ptr, spare_len); - -            (initialized, spare, &mut self.len) -        } -    } -} - -impl<T: Clone, A: Allocator> Vec<T, A> { -    /// Resizes the `Vec` in-place so that `len` is equal to `new_len`. -    /// -    /// If `new_len` is greater than `len`, the `Vec` is extended by the -    /// difference, with each additional slot filled with `value`. -    /// If `new_len` is less than `len`, the `Vec` is simply truncated. -    /// -    /// This method requires `T` to implement [`Clone`], -    /// in order to be able to clone the passed value. -    /// If you need more flexibility (or want to rely on [`Default`] instead of -    /// [`Clone`]), use [`Vec::resize_with`]. -    /// If you only need to resize to a smaller size, use [`Vec::truncate`]. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec!["hello"]; -    /// vec.resize(3, "world"); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, ["hello", "world", "world"]); -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// vec.resize(2, 0); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_resize", since = "1.5.0")] -    pub fn resize(&mut self, new_len: usize, value: T) { -        let len = self.len(); - -        if new_len > len { -            self.extend_with(new_len - len, value) -        } else { -            self.truncate(new_len); -        } -    } - -    /// Tries to resize the `Vec` in-place so that `len` is equal to `new_len`. -    /// -    /// If `new_len` is greater than `len`, the `Vec` is extended by the -    /// difference, with each additional slot filled with `value`. -    /// If `new_len` is less than `len`, the `Vec` is simply truncated. -    /// -    /// This method requires `T` to implement [`Clone`], -    /// in order to be able to clone the passed value. -    /// If you need more flexibility (or want to rely on [`Default`] instead of -    /// [`Clone`]), use [`Vec::resize_with`]. -    /// If you only need to resize to a smaller size, use [`Vec::truncate`]. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec!["hello"]; -    /// vec.try_resize(3, "world").unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, ["hello", "world", "world"]); -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// vec.try_resize(2, 0).unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2]); -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec![42]; -    /// let result = vec.try_resize(usize::MAX, 0); -    /// assert!(result.is_err()); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "kernel", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn try_resize(&mut self, new_len: usize, value: T) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        let len = self.len(); - -        if new_len > len { -            self.try_extend_with(new_len - len, value) -        } else { -            self.truncate(new_len); -            Ok(()) -        } -    } - -    /// Clones and appends all elements in a slice to the `Vec`. -    /// -    /// Iterates over the slice `other`, clones each element, and then appends -    /// it to this `Vec`. The `other` slice is traversed in-order. -    /// -    /// Note that this function is same as [`extend`] except that it is -    /// specialized to work with slices instead. If and when Rust gets -    /// specialization this function will likely be deprecated (but still -    /// available). -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1]; -    /// vec.extend_from_slice(&[2, 3, 4]); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 4]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// [`extend`]: Vec::extend -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_extend_from_slice", since = "1.6.0")] -    pub fn extend_from_slice(&mut self, other: &[T]) { -        self.spec_extend(other.iter()) -    } - -    /// Tries to clone and append all elements in a slice to the `Vec`. -    /// -    /// Iterates over the slice `other`, clones each element, and then appends -    /// it to this `Vec`. The `other` slice is traversed in-order. -    /// -    /// Note that this function is same as [`extend`] except that it is -    /// specialized to work with slices instead. If and when Rust gets -    /// specialization this function will likely be deprecated (but still -    /// available). -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1]; -    /// vec.try_extend_from_slice(&[2, 3, 4]).unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 4]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// [`extend`]: Vec::extend -    #[stable(feature = "kernel", since = "1.0.0")] -    pub fn try_extend_from_slice(&mut self, other: &[T]) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.try_spec_extend(other.iter()) -    } - -    /// Copies elements from `src` range to the end of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the starting point is greater than the end point or if -    /// the end point is greater than the length of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// -    /// vec.extend_from_within(2..); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4]); -    /// -    /// vec.extend_from_within(..2); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4, 0, 1]); -    /// -    /// vec.extend_from_within(4..8); -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4, 0, 1, 4, 2, 3, 4]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_extend_from_within", since = "1.53.0")] -    pub fn extend_from_within<R>(&mut self, src: R) -    where -        R: RangeBounds<usize>, -    { -        let range = slice::range(src, ..self.len()); -        self.reserve(range.len()); - -        // SAFETY: -        // - `slice::range` guarantees that the given range is valid for indexing self -        unsafe { -            self.spec_extend_from_within(range); -        } -    } -} - -impl<T, A: Allocator, const N: usize> Vec<[T; N], A> { -    /// Takes a `Vec<[T; N]>` and flattens it into a `Vec<T>`. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the length of the resulting vector would overflow a `usize`. -    /// -    /// This is only possible when flattening a vector of arrays of zero-sized -    /// types, and thus tends to be irrelevant in practice. If -    /// `size_of::<T>() > 0`, this will never panic. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(slice_flatten)] -    /// -    /// let mut vec = vec![[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]]; -    /// assert_eq!(vec.pop(), Some([7, 8, 9])); -    /// -    /// let mut flattened = vec.into_flattened(); -    /// assert_eq!(flattened.pop(), Some(6)); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "slice_flatten", issue = "95629")] -    pub fn into_flattened(self) -> Vec<T, A> { -        let (ptr, len, cap, alloc) = self.into_raw_parts_with_alloc(); -        let (new_len, new_cap) = if T::IS_ZST { -            (len.checked_mul(N).expect("vec len overflow"), usize::MAX) -        } else { -            // SAFETY: -            // - `cap * N` cannot overflow because the allocation is already in -            // the address space. -            // - Each `[T; N]` has `N` valid elements, so there are `len * N` -            // valid elements in the allocation. -            unsafe { (len.unchecked_mul(N), cap.unchecked_mul(N)) } -        }; -        // SAFETY: -        // - `ptr` was allocated by `self` -        // - `ptr` is well-aligned because `[T; N]` has the same alignment as `T`. -        // - `new_cap` refers to the same sized allocation as `cap` because -        // `new_cap * size_of::<T>()` == `cap * size_of::<[T; N]>()` -        // - `len` <= `cap`, so `len * N` <= `cap * N`. -        unsafe { Vec::<T, A>::from_raw_parts_in(ptr.cast(), new_len, new_cap, alloc) } -    } -} - -impl<T: Clone, A: Allocator> Vec<T, A> { -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    /// Extend the vector by `n` clones of value. -    fn extend_with(&mut self, n: usize, value: T) { -        self.reserve(n); - -        unsafe { -            let mut ptr = self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len()); -            // Use SetLenOnDrop to work around bug where compiler -            // might not realize the store through `ptr` through self.set_len() -            // don't alias. -            let mut local_len = SetLenOnDrop::new(&mut self.len); - -            // Write all elements except the last one -            for _ in 1..n { -                ptr::write(ptr, value.clone()); -                ptr = ptr.add(1); -                // Increment the length in every step in case clone() panics -                local_len.increment_len(1); -            } - -            if n > 0 { -                // We can write the last element directly without cloning needlessly -                ptr::write(ptr, value); -                local_len.increment_len(1); -            } - -            // len set by scope guard -        } -    } - -    /// Try to extend the vector by `n` clones of value. -    fn try_extend_with(&mut self, n: usize, value: T) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.try_reserve(n)?; - -        unsafe { -            let mut ptr = self.as_mut_ptr().add(self.len()); -            // Use SetLenOnDrop to work around bug where compiler -            // might not realize the store through `ptr` through self.set_len() -            // don't alias. -            let mut local_len = SetLenOnDrop::new(&mut self.len); - -            // Write all elements except the last one -            for _ in 1..n { -                ptr::write(ptr, value.clone()); -                ptr = ptr.add(1); -                // Increment the length in every step in case clone() panics -                local_len.increment_len(1); -            } - -            if n > 0 { -                // We can write the last element directly without cloning needlessly -                ptr::write(ptr, value); -                local_len.increment_len(1); -            } - -            // len set by scope guard -            Ok(()) -        } -    } -} - -impl<T: PartialEq, A: Allocator> Vec<T, A> { -    /// Removes consecutive repeated elements in the vector according to the -    /// [`PartialEq`] trait implementation. -    /// -    /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 2, 3, 2]; -    /// -    /// vec.dedup(); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 2]); -    /// ``` -    #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -    #[inline] -    pub fn dedup(&mut self) { -        self.dedup_by(|a, b| a == b) -    } -} - -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// -// Internal methods and functions -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// - -#[doc(hidden)] -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -pub fn from_elem<T: Clone>(elem: T, n: usize) -> Vec<T> { -    <T as SpecFromElem>::from_elem(elem, n, Global) -} - -#[doc(hidden)] -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[unstable(feature = "allocator_api", issue = "32838")] -pub fn from_elem_in<T: Clone, A: Allocator>(elem: T, n: usize, alloc: A) -> Vec<T, A> { -    <T as SpecFromElem>::from_elem(elem, n, alloc) -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -trait ExtendFromWithinSpec { -    /// # Safety -    /// -    /// - `src` needs to be valid index -    /// - `self.capacity() - self.len()` must be `>= src.len()` -    unsafe fn spec_extend_from_within(&mut self, src: Range<usize>); -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<T: Clone, A: Allocator> ExtendFromWithinSpec for Vec<T, A> { -    default unsafe fn spec_extend_from_within(&mut self, src: Range<usize>) { -        // SAFETY: -        // - len is increased only after initializing elements -        let (this, spare, len) = unsafe { self.split_at_spare_mut_with_len() }; - -        // SAFETY: -        // - caller guarantees that src is a valid index -        let to_clone = unsafe { this.get_unchecked(src) }; - -        iter::zip(to_clone, spare) -            .map(|(src, dst)| dst.write(src.clone())) -            // Note: -            // - Element was just initialized with `MaybeUninit::write`, so it's ok to increase len -            // - len is increased after each element to prevent leaks (see issue #82533) -            .for_each(|_| *len += 1); -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<T: Copy, A: Allocator> ExtendFromWithinSpec for Vec<T, A> { -    unsafe fn spec_extend_from_within(&mut self, src: Range<usize>) { -        let count = src.len(); -        { -            let (init, spare) = self.split_at_spare_mut(); - -            // SAFETY: -            // - caller guarantees that `src` is a valid index -            let source = unsafe { init.get_unchecked(src) }; - -            // SAFETY: -            // - Both pointers are created from unique slice references (`&mut [_]`) -            //   so they are valid and do not overlap. -            // - Elements are :Copy so it's OK to copy them, without doing -            //   anything with the original values -            // - `count` is equal to the len of `source`, so source is valid for -            //   `count` reads -            // - `.reserve(count)` guarantees that `spare.len() >= count` so spare -            //   is valid for `count` writes -            unsafe { ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(source.as_ptr(), spare.as_mut_ptr() as _, count) }; -        } - -        // SAFETY: -        // - The elements were just initialized by `copy_nonoverlapping` -        self.len += count; -    } -} - -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// -// Common trait implementations for Vec -//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> ops::Deref for Vec<T, A> { -    type Target = [T]; - -    #[inline] -    fn deref(&self) -> &[T] { -        unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(self.as_ptr(), self.len) } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> ops::DerefMut for Vec<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [T] { -        unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts_mut(self.as_mut_ptr(), self.len) } -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: Clone, A: Allocator + Clone> Clone for Vec<T, A> { -    #[cfg(not(test))] -    fn clone(&self) -> Self { -        let alloc = self.allocator().clone(); -        <[T]>::to_vec_in(&**self, alloc) -    } - -    // HACK(japaric): with cfg(test) the inherent `[T]::to_vec` method, which is -    // required for this method definition, is not available. Instead use the -    // `slice::to_vec` function which is only available with cfg(test) -    // NB see the slice::hack module in slice.rs for more information -    #[cfg(test)] -    fn clone(&self) -> Self { -        let alloc = self.allocator().clone(); -        crate::slice::to_vec(&**self, alloc) -    } - -    fn clone_from(&mut self, other: &Self) { -        crate::slice::SpecCloneIntoVec::clone_into(other.as_slice(), self); -    } -} - -/// The hash of a vector is the same as that of the corresponding slice, -/// as required by the `core::borrow::Borrow` implementation. -/// -/// ``` -/// use std::hash::BuildHasher; -/// -/// let b = std::hash::RandomState::new(); -/// let v: Vec<u8> = vec![0xa8, 0x3c, 0x09]; -/// let s: &[u8] = &[0xa8, 0x3c, 0x09]; -/// assert_eq!(b.hash_one(v), b.hash_one(s)); -/// ``` -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: Hash, A: Allocator> Hash for Vec<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn hash<H: Hasher>(&self, state: &mut H) { -        Hash::hash(&**self, state) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -#[rustc_on_unimplemented( -    message = "vector indices are of type `usize` or ranges of `usize`", -    label = "vector indices are of type `usize` or ranges of `usize`" -)] -impl<T, I: SliceIndex<[T]>, A: Allocator> Index<I> for Vec<T, A> { -    type Output = I::Output; - -    #[inline] -    fn index(&self, index: I) -> &Self::Output { -        Index::index(&**self, index) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -#[rustc_on_unimplemented( -    message = "vector indices are of type `usize` or ranges of `usize`", -    label = "vector indices are of type `usize` or ranges of `usize`" -)] -impl<T, I: SliceIndex<[T]>, A: Allocator> IndexMut<I> for Vec<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn index_mut(&mut self, index: I) -> &mut Self::Output { -        IndexMut::index_mut(&mut **self, index) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T> FromIterator<T> for Vec<T> { -    #[inline] -    fn from_iter<I: IntoIterator<Item = T>>(iter: I) -> Vec<T> { -        <Self as SpecFromIter<T, I::IntoIter>>::from_iter(iter.into_iter()) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> IntoIterator for Vec<T, A> { -    type Item = T; -    type IntoIter = IntoIter<T, A>; - -    /// Creates a consuming iterator, that is, one that moves each value out of -    /// the vector (from start to end). The vector cannot be used after calling -    /// this. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let v = vec!["a".to_string(), "b".to_string()]; -    /// let mut v_iter = v.into_iter(); -    /// -    /// let first_element: Option<String> = v_iter.next(); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(first_element, Some("a".to_string())); -    /// assert_eq!(v_iter.next(), Some("b".to_string())); -    /// assert_eq!(v_iter.next(), None); -    /// ``` -    #[inline] -    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { -        unsafe { -            let mut me = ManuallyDrop::new(self); -            let alloc = ManuallyDrop::new(ptr::read(me.allocator())); -            let begin = me.as_mut_ptr(); -            let end = if T::IS_ZST { -                begin.wrapping_byte_add(me.len()) -            } else { -                begin.add(me.len()) as *const T -            }; -            let cap = me.buf.capacity(); -            IntoIter { -                buf: NonNull::new_unchecked(begin), -                phantom: PhantomData, -                cap, -                alloc, -                ptr: begin, -                end, -            } -        } -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<'a, T, A: Allocator> IntoIterator for &'a Vec<T, A> { -    type Item = &'a T; -    type IntoIter = slice::Iter<'a, T>; - -    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { -        self.iter() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<'a, T, A: Allocator> IntoIterator for &'a mut Vec<T, A> { -    type Item = &'a mut T; -    type IntoIter = slice::IterMut<'a, T>; - -    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { -        self.iter_mut() -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> Extend<T> for Vec<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn extend<I: IntoIterator<Item = T>>(&mut self, iter: I) { -        <Self as SpecExtend<T, I::IntoIter>>::spec_extend(self, iter.into_iter()) -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn extend_one(&mut self, item: T) { -        self.push(item); -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) { -        self.reserve(additional); -    } -} - -impl<T, A: Allocator> Vec<T, A> { -    // leaf method to which various SpecFrom/SpecExtend implementations delegate when -    // they have no further optimizations to apply -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    fn extend_desugared<I: Iterator<Item = T>>(&mut self, mut iterator: I) { -        // This is the case for a general iterator. -        // -        // This function should be the moral equivalent of: -        // -        //      for item in iterator { -        //          self.push(item); -        //      } -        while let Some(element) = iterator.next() { -            let len = self.len(); -            if len == self.capacity() { -                let (lower, _) = iterator.size_hint(); -                self.reserve(lower.saturating_add(1)); -            } -            unsafe { -                ptr::write(self.as_mut_ptr().add(len), element); -                // Since next() executes user code which can panic we have to bump the length -                // after each step. -                // NB can't overflow since we would have had to alloc the address space -                self.set_len(len + 1); -            } -        } -    } - -    // leaf method to which various SpecFrom/SpecExtend implementations delegate when -    // they have no further optimizations to apply -    fn try_extend_desugared<I: Iterator<Item = T>>(&mut self, mut iterator: I) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        // This is the case for a general iterator. -        // -        // This function should be the moral equivalent of: -        // -        //      for item in iterator { -        //          self.push(item); -        //      } -        while let Some(element) = iterator.next() { -            let len = self.len(); -            if len == self.capacity() { -                let (lower, _) = iterator.size_hint(); -                self.try_reserve(lower.saturating_add(1))?; -            } -            unsafe { -                ptr::write(self.as_mut_ptr().add(len), element); -                // Since next() executes user code which can panic we have to bump the length -                // after each step. -                // NB can't overflow since we would have had to alloc the address space -                self.set_len(len + 1); -            } -        } - -        Ok(()) -    } - -    // specific extend for `TrustedLen` iterators, called both by the specializations -    // and internal places where resolving specialization makes compilation slower -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    fn extend_trusted(&mut self, iterator: impl iter::TrustedLen<Item = T>) { -        let (low, high) = iterator.size_hint(); -        if let Some(additional) = high { -            debug_assert_eq!( -                low, -                additional, -                "TrustedLen iterator's size hint is not exact: {:?}", -                (low, high) -            ); -            self.reserve(additional); -            unsafe { -                let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr(); -                let mut local_len = SetLenOnDrop::new(&mut self.len); -                iterator.for_each(move |element| { -                    ptr::write(ptr.add(local_len.current_len()), element); -                    // Since the loop executes user code which can panic we have to update -                    // the length every step to correctly drop what we've written. -                    // NB can't overflow since we would have had to alloc the address space -                    local_len.increment_len(1); -                }); -            } -        } else { -            // Per TrustedLen contract a `None` upper bound means that the iterator length -            // truly exceeds usize::MAX, which would eventually lead to a capacity overflow anyway. -            // Since the other branch already panics eagerly (via `reserve()`) we do the same here. -            // This avoids additional codegen for a fallback code path which would eventually -            // panic anyway. -            panic!("capacity overflow"); -        } -    } - -    // specific extend for `TrustedLen` iterators, called both by the specializations -    // and internal places where resolving specialization makes compilation slower -    fn try_extend_trusted(&mut self, iterator: impl iter::TrustedLen<Item = T>) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        let (low, high) = iterator.size_hint(); -        if let Some(additional) = high { -            debug_assert_eq!( -                low, -                additional, -                "TrustedLen iterator's size hint is not exact: {:?}", -                (low, high) -            ); -            self.try_reserve(additional)?; -            unsafe { -                let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr(); -                let mut local_len = SetLenOnDrop::new(&mut self.len); -                iterator.for_each(move |element| { -                    ptr::write(ptr.add(local_len.current_len()), element); -                    // Since the loop executes user code which can panic we have to update -                    // the length every step to correctly drop what we've written. -                    // NB can't overflow since we would have had to alloc the address space -                    local_len.increment_len(1); -                }); -            } -            Ok(()) -        } else { -            Err(TryReserveErrorKind::CapacityOverflow.into()) -        } -    } - -    /// Creates a splicing iterator that replaces the specified range in the vector -    /// with the given `replace_with` iterator and yields the removed items. -    /// `replace_with` does not need to be the same length as `range`. -    /// -    /// `range` is removed even if the iterator is not consumed until the end. -    /// -    /// It is unspecified how many elements are removed from the vector -    /// if the `Splice` value is leaked. -    /// -    /// The input iterator `replace_with` is only consumed when the `Splice` value is dropped. -    /// -    /// This is optimal if: -    /// -    /// * The tail (elements in the vector after `range`) is empty, -    /// * or `replace_with` yields fewer or equal elements than `range`’s length -    /// * or the lower bound of its `size_hint()` is exact. -    /// -    /// Otherwise, a temporary vector is allocated and the tail is moved twice. -    /// -    /// # Panics -    /// -    /// Panics if the starting point is greater than the end point or if -    /// the end point is greater than the length of the vector. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4]; -    /// let new = [7, 8, 9]; -    /// let u: Vec<_> = v.splice(1..3, new).collect(); -    /// assert_eq!(v, &[1, 7, 8, 9, 4]); -    /// assert_eq!(u, &[2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -    #[inline] -    #[stable(feature = "vec_splice", since = "1.21.0")] -    pub fn splice<R, I>(&mut self, range: R, replace_with: I) -> Splice<'_, I::IntoIter, A> -    where -        R: RangeBounds<usize>, -        I: IntoIterator<Item = T>, -    { -        Splice { drain: self.drain(range), replace_with: replace_with.into_iter() } -    } - -    /// Creates an iterator which uses a closure to determine if an element should be removed. -    /// -    /// If the closure returns true, then the element is removed and yielded. -    /// If the closure returns false, the element will remain in the vector and will not be yielded -    /// by the iterator. -    /// -    /// If the returned `ExtractIf` is not exhausted, e.g. because it is dropped without iterating -    /// or the iteration short-circuits, then the remaining elements will be retained. -    /// Use [`retain`] with a negated predicate if you do not need the returned iterator. -    /// -    /// [`retain`]: Vec::retain -    /// -    /// Using this method is equivalent to the following code: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// # let some_predicate = |x: &mut i32| { *x == 2 || *x == 3 || *x == 6 }; -    /// # let mut vec = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]; -    /// let mut i = 0; -    /// while i < vec.len() { -    ///     if some_predicate(&mut vec[i]) { -    ///         let val = vec.remove(i); -    ///         // your code here -    ///     } else { -    ///         i += 1; -    ///     } -    /// } -    /// -    /// # assert_eq!(vec, vec![1, 4, 5]); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// But `extract_if` is easier to use. `extract_if` is also more efficient, -    /// because it can backshift the elements of the array in bulk. -    /// -    /// Note that `extract_if` also lets you mutate every element in the filter closure, -    /// regardless of whether you choose to keep or remove it. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// Splitting an array into evens and odds, reusing the original allocation: -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// #![feature(extract_if)] -    /// let mut numbers = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 15]; -    /// -    /// let evens = numbers.extract_if(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<Vec<_>>(); -    /// let odds = numbers; -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(evens, vec![2, 4, 6, 8, 14]); -    /// assert_eq!(odds, vec![1, 3, 5, 9, 11, 13, 15]); -    /// ``` -    #[unstable(feature = "extract_if", reason = "recently added", issue = "43244")] -    pub fn extract_if<F>(&mut self, filter: F) -> ExtractIf<'_, T, F, A> -    where -        F: FnMut(&mut T) -> bool, -    { -        let old_len = self.len(); - -        // Guard against us getting leaked (leak amplification) -        unsafe { -            self.set_len(0); -        } - -        ExtractIf { vec: self, idx: 0, del: 0, old_len, pred: filter } -    } -} - -/// Extend implementation that copies elements out of references before pushing them onto the Vec. -/// -/// This implementation is specialized for slice iterators, where it uses [`copy_from_slice`] to -/// append the entire slice at once. -/// -/// [`copy_from_slice`]: slice::copy_from_slice -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "extend_ref", since = "1.2.0")] -impl<'a, T: Copy + 'a, A: Allocator> Extend<&'a T> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn extend<I: IntoIterator<Item = &'a T>>(&mut self, iter: I) { -        self.spec_extend(iter.into_iter()) -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn extend_one(&mut self, &item: &'a T) { -        self.push(item); -    } - -    #[inline] -    fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) { -        self.reserve(additional); -    } -} - -/// Implements comparison of vectors, [lexicographically](Ord#lexicographical-comparison). -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A1, A2> PartialOrd<Vec<T, A2>> for Vec<T, A1> -where -    T: PartialOrd, -    A1: Allocator, -    A2: Allocator, -{ -    #[inline] -    fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Vec<T, A2>) -> Option<Ordering> { -        PartialOrd::partial_cmp(&**self, &**other) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: Eq, A: Allocator> Eq for Vec<T, A> {} - -/// Implements ordering of vectors, [lexicographically](Ord#lexicographical-comparison). -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: Ord, A: Allocator> Ord for Vec<T, A> { -    #[inline] -    fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering { -        Ord::cmp(&**self, &**other) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -unsafe impl<#[may_dangle] T, A: Allocator> Drop for Vec<T, A> { -    fn drop(&mut self) { -        unsafe { -            // use drop for [T] -            // use a raw slice to refer to the elements of the vector as weakest necessary type; -            // could avoid questions of validity in certain cases -            ptr::drop_in_place(ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(self.as_mut_ptr(), self.len)) -        } -        // RawVec handles deallocation -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T> Default for Vec<T> { -    /// Creates an empty `Vec<T>`. -    /// -    /// The vector will not allocate until elements are pushed onto it. -    fn default() -> Vec<T> { -        Vec::new() -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: fmt::Debug, A: Allocator> fmt::Debug for Vec<T, A> { -    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { -        fmt::Debug::fmt(&**self, f) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> AsRef<Vec<T, A>> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn as_ref(&self) -> &Vec<T, A> { -        self -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "vec_as_mut", since = "1.5.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> AsMut<Vec<T, A>> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn as_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Vec<T, A> { -        self -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> AsRef<[T]> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn as_ref(&self) -> &[T] { -        self -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "vec_as_mut", since = "1.5.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> AsMut<[T]> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn as_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [T] { -        self -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl<T: Clone> From<&[T]> for Vec<T> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<T>` and fill it by cloning `s`'s items. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(&[1, 2, 3][..]), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(test))] -    fn from(s: &[T]) -> Vec<T> { -        s.to_vec() -    } -    #[cfg(test)] -    fn from(s: &[T]) -> Vec<T> { -        crate::slice::to_vec(s, Global) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_mut", since = "1.19.0")] -impl<T: Clone> From<&mut [T]> for Vec<T> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<T>` and fill it by cloning `s`'s items. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(&mut [1, 2, 3][..]), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(test))] -    fn from(s: &mut [T]) -> Vec<T> { -        s.to_vec() -    } -    #[cfg(test)] -    fn from(s: &mut [T]) -> Vec<T> { -        crate::slice::to_vec(s, Global) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_array_ref", since = "1.74.0")] -impl<T: Clone, const N: usize> From<&[T; N]> for Vec<T> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<T>` and fill it by cloning `s`'s items. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(&[1, 2, 3]), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    fn from(s: &[T; N]) -> Vec<T> { -        Self::from(s.as_slice()) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_array_ref", since = "1.74.0")] -impl<T: Clone, const N: usize> From<&mut [T; N]> for Vec<T> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<T>` and fill it by cloning `s`'s items. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(&mut [1, 2, 3]), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    fn from(s: &mut [T; N]) -> Vec<T> { -        Self::from(s.as_mut_slice()) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_array", since = "1.44.0")] -impl<T, const N: usize> From<[T; N]> for Vec<T> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<T>` and move `s`'s items into it. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from([1, 2, 3]), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    #[cfg(not(test))] -    fn from(s: [T; N]) -> Vec<T> { -        <[T]>::into_vec(Box::new(s)) -    } - -    #[cfg(test)] -    fn from(s: [T; N]) -> Vec<T> { -        crate::slice::into_vec(Box::new(s)) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_borrow))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_cow_slice", since = "1.14.0")] -impl<'a, T> From<Cow<'a, [T]>> for Vec<T> -where -    [T]: ToOwned<Owned = Vec<T>>, -{ -    /// Convert a clone-on-write slice into a vector. -    /// -    /// If `s` already owns a `Vec<T>`, it will be returned directly. -    /// If `s` is borrowing a slice, a new `Vec<T>` will be allocated and -    /// filled by cloning `s`'s items into it. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// # use std::borrow::Cow; -    /// let o: Cow<'_, [i32]> = Cow::Owned(vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// let b: Cow<'_, [i32]> = Cow::Borrowed(&[1, 2, 3]); -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(o), Vec::from(b)); -    /// ``` -    fn from(s: Cow<'a, [T]>) -> Vec<T> { -        s.into_owned() -    } -} - -// note: test pulls in std, which causes errors here -#[cfg(not(test))] -#[stable(feature = "vec_from_box", since = "1.18.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> From<Box<[T], A>> for Vec<T, A> { -    /// Convert a boxed slice into a vector by transferring ownership of -    /// the existing heap allocation. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// let b: Box<[i32]> = vec![1, 2, 3].into_boxed_slice(); -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from(b), vec![1, 2, 3]); -    /// ``` -    fn from(s: Box<[T], A>) -> Self { -        s.into_vec() -    } -} - -// note: test pulls in std, which causes errors here -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[cfg(not(test))] -#[stable(feature = "box_from_vec", since = "1.20.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator> From<Vec<T, A>> for Box<[T], A> { -    /// Convert a vector into a boxed slice. -    /// -    /// If `v` has excess capacity, its items will be moved into a -    /// newly-allocated buffer with exactly the right capacity. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Box::from(vec![1, 2, 3]), vec![1, 2, 3].into_boxed_slice()); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// Any excess capacity is removed: -    /// ``` -    /// let mut vec = Vec::with_capacity(10); -    /// vec.extend([1, 2, 3]); -    /// -    /// assert_eq!(Box::from(vec), vec![1, 2, 3].into_boxed_slice()); -    /// ``` -    fn from(v: Vec<T, A>) -> Self { -        v.into_boxed_slice() -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -#[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] -impl From<&str> for Vec<u8> { -    /// Allocate a `Vec<u8>` and fill it with a UTF-8 string. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(Vec::from("123"), vec![b'1', b'2', b'3']); -    /// ``` -    fn from(s: &str) -> Vec<u8> { -        From::from(s.as_bytes()) -    } -} - -#[stable(feature = "array_try_from_vec", since = "1.48.0")] -impl<T, A: Allocator, const N: usize> TryFrom<Vec<T, A>> for [T; N] { -    type Error = Vec<T, A>; - -    /// Gets the entire contents of the `Vec<T>` as an array, -    /// if its size exactly matches that of the requested array. -    /// -    /// # Examples -    /// -    /// ``` -    /// assert_eq!(vec![1, 2, 3].try_into(), Ok([1, 2, 3])); -    /// assert_eq!(<Vec<i32>>::new().try_into(), Ok([])); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// If the length doesn't match, the input comes back in `Err`: -    /// ``` -    /// let r: Result<[i32; 4], _> = (0..10).collect::<Vec<_>>().try_into(); -    /// assert_eq!(r, Err(vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9])); -    /// ``` -    /// -    /// If you're fine with just getting a prefix of the `Vec<T>`, -    /// you can call [`.truncate(N)`](Vec::truncate) first. -    /// ``` -    /// let mut v = String::from("hello world").into_bytes(); -    /// v.sort(); -    /// v.truncate(2); -    /// let [a, b]: [_; 2] = v.try_into().unwrap(); -    /// assert_eq!(a, b' '); -    /// assert_eq!(b, b'd'); -    /// ``` -    fn try_from(mut vec: Vec<T, A>) -> Result<[T; N], Vec<T, A>> { -        if vec.len() != N { -            return Err(vec); -        } - -        // SAFETY: `.set_len(0)` is always sound. -        unsafe { vec.set_len(0) }; - -        // SAFETY: A `Vec`'s pointer is always aligned properly, and -        // the alignment the array needs is the same as the items. -        // We checked earlier that we have sufficient items. -        // The items will not double-drop as the `set_len` -        // tells the `Vec` not to also drop them. -        let array = unsafe { ptr::read(vec.as_ptr() as *const [T; N]) }; -        Ok(array) -    } -} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/partial_eq.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/partial_eq.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 10ad4e492287..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/partial_eq.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,49 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -use crate::alloc::Allocator; -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -use crate::borrow::Cow; - -use super::Vec; - -macro_rules! __impl_slice_eq1 { -    ([$($vars:tt)*] $lhs:ty, $rhs:ty $(where $ty:ty: $bound:ident)?, #[$stability:meta]) => { -        #[$stability] -        impl<T, U, $($vars)*> PartialEq<$rhs> for $lhs -        where -            T: PartialEq<U>, -            $($ty: $bound)? -        { -            #[inline] -            fn eq(&self, other: &$rhs) -> bool { self[..] == other[..] } -            #[inline] -            fn ne(&self, other: &$rhs) -> bool { self[..] != other[..] } -        } -    } -} - -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A1: Allocator, A2: Allocator] Vec<T, A1>, Vec<U, A2>, #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] Vec<T, A>, &[U], #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] Vec<T, A>, &mut [U], #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] &[T], Vec<U, A>, #[stable(feature = "partialeq_vec_for_ref_slice", since = "1.46.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] &mut [T], Vec<U, A>, #[stable(feature = "partialeq_vec_for_ref_slice", since = "1.46.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] Vec<T, A>, [U], #[stable(feature = "partialeq_vec_for_slice", since = "1.48.0")]  } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] [T], Vec<U, A>, #[stable(feature = "partialeq_vec_for_slice", since = "1.48.0")]  } -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator] Cow<'_, [T]>, Vec<U, A> where T: Clone, #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -__impl_slice_eq1! { [] Cow<'_, [T]>, &[U] where T: Clone, #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -__impl_slice_eq1! { [] Cow<'_, [T]>, &mut [U] where T: Clone, #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator, const N: usize] Vec<T, A>, [U; N], #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } -__impl_slice_eq1! { [A: Allocator, const N: usize] Vec<T, A>, &[U; N], #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] } - -// NOTE: some less important impls are omitted to reduce code bloat -// FIXME(Centril): Reconsider this? -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] Vec<A>, &mut [B; N], } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] [A; N], Vec<B>, } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] &[A; N], Vec<B>, } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] &mut [A; N], Vec<B>, } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] Cow<'a, [A]>, [B; N], } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] Cow<'a, [A]>, &[B; N], } -//__impl_slice_eq1! { [const N: usize] Cow<'a, [A]>, &mut [B; N], } diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/set_len_on_drop.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/set_len_on_drop.rs deleted file mode 100644 index d3c7297b80ec..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/set_len_on_drop.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,35 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -// Set the length of the vec when the `SetLenOnDrop` value goes out of scope. -// -// The idea is: The length field in SetLenOnDrop is a local variable -// that the optimizer will see does not alias with any stores through the Vec's data -// pointer. This is a workaround for alias analysis issue #32155 -pub(super) struct SetLenOnDrop<'a> { -    len: &'a mut usize, -    local_len: usize, -} - -impl<'a> SetLenOnDrop<'a> { -    #[inline] -    pub(super) fn new(len: &'a mut usize) -> Self { -        SetLenOnDrop { local_len: *len, len } -    } - -    #[inline] -    pub(super) fn increment_len(&mut self, increment: usize) { -        self.local_len += increment; -    } - -    #[inline] -    pub(super) fn current_len(&self) -> usize { -        self.local_len -    } -} - -impl Drop for SetLenOnDrop<'_> { -    #[inline] -    fn drop(&mut self) { -        *self.len = self.local_len; -    } -} diff --git a/rust/alloc/vec/spec_extend.rs b/rust/alloc/vec/spec_extend.rs deleted file mode 100644 index ada919537446..000000000000 --- a/rust/alloc/vec/spec_extend.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,119 +0,0 @@ -// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR MIT - -use crate::alloc::Allocator; -use crate::collections::TryReserveError; -use core::iter::TrustedLen; -use core::slice::{self}; - -use super::{IntoIter, Vec}; - -// Specialization trait used for Vec::extend -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -pub(super) trait SpecExtend<T, I> { -    fn spec_extend(&mut self, iter: I); -} - -// Specialization trait used for Vec::try_extend -pub(super) trait TrySpecExtend<T, I> { -    fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, iter: I) -> Result<(), TryReserveError>; -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<T, I, A: Allocator> SpecExtend<T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: Iterator<Item = T>, -{ -    default fn spec_extend(&mut self, iter: I) { -        self.extend_desugared(iter) -    } -} - -impl<T, I, A: Allocator> TrySpecExtend<T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: Iterator<Item = T>, -{ -    default fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, iter: I) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.try_extend_desugared(iter) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<T, I, A: Allocator> SpecExtend<T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: TrustedLen<Item = T>, -{ -    default fn spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: I) { -        self.extend_trusted(iterator) -    } -} - -impl<T, I, A: Allocator> TrySpecExtend<T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: TrustedLen<Item = T>, -{ -    default fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: I) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.try_extend_trusted(iterator) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<T, A: Allocator> SpecExtend<T, IntoIter<T>> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn spec_extend(&mut self, mut iterator: IntoIter<T>) { -        unsafe { -            self.append_elements(iterator.as_slice() as _); -        } -        iterator.forget_remaining_elements(); -    } -} - -impl<T, A: Allocator> TrySpecExtend<T, IntoIter<T>> for Vec<T, A> { -    fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, mut iterator: IntoIter<T>) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        unsafe { -            self.try_append_elements(iterator.as_slice() as _)?; -        } -        iterator.forget_remaining_elements(); -        Ok(()) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<'a, T: 'a, I, A: Allocator> SpecExtend<&'a T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: Iterator<Item = &'a T>, -    T: Clone, -{ -    default fn spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: I) { -        self.spec_extend(iterator.cloned()) -    } -} - -impl<'a, T: 'a, I, A: Allocator> TrySpecExtend<&'a T, I> for Vec<T, A> -where -    I: Iterator<Item = &'a T>, -    T: Clone, -{ -    default fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: I) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        self.try_spec_extend(iterator.cloned()) -    } -} - -#[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] -impl<'a, T: 'a, A: Allocator> SpecExtend<&'a T, slice::Iter<'a, T>> for Vec<T, A> -where -    T: Copy, -{ -    fn spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: slice::Iter<'a, T>) { -        let slice = iterator.as_slice(); -        unsafe { self.append_elements(slice) }; -    } -} - -impl<'a, T: 'a, A: Allocator> TrySpecExtend<&'a T, slice::Iter<'a, T>> for Vec<T, A> -where -    T: Copy, -{ -    fn try_spec_extend(&mut self, iterator: slice::Iter<'a, T>) -> Result<(), TryReserveError> { -        let slice = iterator.as_slice(); -        unsafe { self.try_append_elements(slice) } -    } -}  |