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-rw-r--r--vendor/thin-vec/.cargo-checksum.json1
-rw-r--r--vendor/thin-vec/Cargo.toml33
-rw-r--r--vendor/thin-vec/README.md9
-rw-r--r--vendor/thin-vec/src/lib.rs3117
4 files changed, 3160 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/thin-vec/.cargo-checksum.json b/vendor/thin-vec/.cargo-checksum.json
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..fc4888d7f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/thin-vec/.cargo-checksum.json
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+{"files":{"Cargo.toml":"596cca0e2a5b1abe635e3fcdd3fa1f5f7256a5f2abf63b9c6bba0cce32258b02","README.md":"9f102f13ccbabe9cdec7a206aa298d65e33dea84da9f08dd17b358ff44fe0286","src/lib.rs":"d6300952a66dc289328a464b466f4b281272b133e42e20e1e2cd0e6f8690087d"},"package":"104c2cb3180b6fb6d5b2278768e9b88b578d32ba751ea6e8d026688a40d7ed87"} \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/vendor/thin-vec/Cargo.toml b/vendor/thin-vec/Cargo.toml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..38908830d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/thin-vec/Cargo.toml
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+# THIS FILE IS AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED BY CARGO
+#
+# When uploading crates to the registry Cargo will automatically
+# "normalize" Cargo.toml files for maximal compatibility
+# with all versions of Cargo and also rewrite `path` dependencies
+# to registry (e.g., crates.io) dependencies.
+#
+# If you are reading this file be aware that the original Cargo.toml
+# will likely look very different (and much more reasonable).
+# See Cargo.toml.orig for the original contents.
+
+[package]
+edition = "2018"
+name = "thin-vec"
+version = "0.2.8"
+authors = ["Aria Beingessner <a.beingessner@gmail.com>"]
+description = "A vec that takes up less space on the stack"
+homepage = "https://github.com/gankra/thin-vec"
+readme = "README.md"
+license = "MIT/Apache-2.0"
+repository = "https://github.com/gankra/thin-vec"
+
+[dependencies.serde]
+version = "1.0"
+optional = true
+
+[dev-dependencies.serde_test]
+version = "1.0"
+
+[features]
+default = []
+gecko-ffi = []
+unstable = []
diff --git a/vendor/thin-vec/README.md b/vendor/thin-vec/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..e8a8c90a2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/thin-vec/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+![Rust CI](https://github.com/Gankra/thin-vec/workflows/Rust/badge.svg?branch=master) [![crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/thin-vec.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/thin-vec) [![](https://docs.rs/thin-vec/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/thin-vec)
+
+# thin-vec
+
+ThinVec is a Vec that stores its length and capacity inline, making it take up
+less space.
+
+Currently this crate mostly exists to facilitate Gecko (Firefox) FFI, but it
+works perfectly fine as a native rust library as well.
diff --git a/vendor/thin-vec/src/lib.rs b/vendor/thin-vec/src/lib.rs
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..60785150e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vendor/thin-vec/src/lib.rs
@@ -0,0 +1,3117 @@
+//! ThinVec is exactly the same as Vec, except that it stores its `len` and `capacity` in the buffer
+//! it allocates.
+//!
+//! This makes the memory footprint of ThinVecs lower; notably in cases where space is reserved for
+//! a non-existence ThinVec<T>. So `Vec<ThinVec<T>>` and `Option<ThinVec<T>>::None` will waste less
+//! space. Being pointer-sized also means it can be passed/stored in registers.
+//!
+//! Of course, any actually constructed ThinVec will theoretically have a bigger allocation, but
+//! the fuzzy nature of allocators means that might not actually be the case.
+//!
+//! Properties of Vec that are preserved:
+//! * `ThinVec::new()` doesn't allocate (it points to a statically allocated singleton)
+//! * reallocation can be done in place
+//! * `size_of::<ThinVec<T>>()` == `size_of::<Option<ThinVec<T>>>()`
+//!
+//! Properties of Vec that aren't preserved:
+//! * `ThinVec<T>` can't ever be zero-cost roundtripped to a `Box<[T]>`, `String`, or `*mut T`
+//! * `from_raw_parts` doesn't exist
+//! * ThinVec currently doesn't bother to not-allocate for Zero Sized Types (e.g. `ThinVec<()>`),
+//! but it could be done if someone cared enough to implement it.
+//!
+//!
+//!
+//! # Gecko FFI
+//!
+//! If you enable the gecko-ffi feature, ThinVec will verbatim bridge with the nsTArray type in
+//! Gecko (Firefox). That is, ThinVec and nsTArray have identical layouts *but not ABIs*,
+//! so nsTArrays/ThinVecs an be natively manipulated by C++ and Rust, and ownership can be
+//! transferred across the FFI boundary (**IF YOU ARE CAREFUL, SEE BELOW!!**).
+//!
+//! While this feature is handy, it is also inherently dangerous to use because Rust and C++ do not
+//! know about each other. Specifically, this can be an issue with non-POD types (types which
+//! have destructors, move constructors, or are `!Copy`).
+//!
+//! ## Do Not Pass By Value
+//!
+//! The biggest thing to keep in mind is that **FFI functions cannot pass ThinVec/nsTArray
+//! by-value**. That is, these are busted APIs:
+//!
+//! ```rust,ignore
+//! // BAD WRONG
+//! extern fn process_data(data: ThinVec<u32>) { ... }
+//! // BAD WRONG
+//! extern fn get_data() -> ThinVec<u32> { ... }
+//! ```
+//!
+//! You must instead pass by-reference:
+//!
+//! ```rust
+//! # use thin_vec::*;
+//! # use std::mem;
+//!
+//! // Read-only access, ok!
+//! extern fn process_data(data: &ThinVec<u32>) {
+//! for val in data {
+//! println!("{}", val);
+//! }
+//! }
+//!
+//! // Replace with empty instance to take ownership, ok!
+//! extern fn consume_data(data: &mut ThinVec<u32>) {
+//! let owned = mem::replace(data, ThinVec::new());
+//! mem::drop(owned);
+//! }
+//!
+//! // Mutate input, ok!
+//! extern fn add_data(dataset: &mut ThinVec<u32>) {
+//! dataset.push(37);
+//! dataset.push(12);
+//! }
+//!
+//! // Return via out-param, usually ok!
+//! //
+//! // WARNING: output must be initialized! (Empty nsTArrays are free, so just do it!)
+//! extern fn get_data(output: &mut ThinVec<u32>) {
+//! *output = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+//! }
+//! ```
+//!
+//! Ignorable Explanation For Those Who Really Want To Know Why:
+//!
+//! > The fundamental issue is that Rust and C++ can't currently communicate about destructors, and
+//! > the semantics of C++ require destructors of function arguments to be run when the function
+//! > returns. Whether the callee or caller is responsible for this is also platform-specific, so
+//! > trying to hack around it manually would be messy.
+//! >
+//! > Also a type having a destructor changes its C++ ABI, because that type must actually exist
+//! > in memory (unlike a trivial struct, which is often passed in registers). We don't currently
+//! > have a way to communicate to Rust that this is happening, so even if we worked out the
+//! > destructor issue with say, MaybeUninit, it would still be a non-starter without some RFCs
+//! > to add explicit rustc support.
+//! >
+//! > Realistically, the best answer here is to have a "heavier" bindgen that can secretly
+//! > generate FFI glue so we can pass things "by value" and have it generate by-reference code
+//! > behind our back (like the cxx crate does). This would muddy up debugging/searchfox though.
+//!
+//! ## Types Should Be Trivially Relocatable
+//!
+//! Types in Rust are always trivially relocatable (unless suitably borrowed/[pinned][]/hidden).
+//! This means all Rust types are legal to relocate with a bitwise copy, you cannot provide
+//! copy or move constructors to execute when this happens, and the old location won't have its
+//! destructor run. This will cause problems for types which have a significant location
+//! (types that intrusively point into themselves or have their location registered with a service).
+//!
+//! While relocations are generally predictable if you're very careful, **you should avoid using
+//! types with significant locations with Rust FFI**.
+//!
+//! Specifically, ThinVec will trivially relocate its contents whenever it needs to reallocate its
+//! buffer to change its capacity. This is the default reallocation strategy for nsTArray, and is
+//! suitable for the vast majority of types. Just be aware of this limitation!
+//!
+//! ## Auto Arrays Are Dangerous
+//!
+//! ThinVec has *some* support for handling auto arrays which store their buffer on the stack,
+//! but this isn't well tested.
+//!
+//! Regardless of how much support we provide, Rust won't be aware of the buffer's limited lifetime,
+//! so standard auto array safety caveats apply about returning/storing them! ThinVec won't ever
+//! produce an auto array on its own, so this is only an issue for transferring an nsTArray into
+//! Rust.
+//!
+//! ## Other Issues
+//!
+//! Standard FFI caveats also apply:
+//!
+//! * Rust is more strict about POD types being initialized (use MaybeUninit if you must)
+//! * `ThinVec<T>` has no idea if the C++ version of `T` has move/copy/assign/delete overloads
+//! * `nsTArray<T>` has no idea if the Rust version of `T` has a Drop/Clone impl
+//! * C++ can do all sorts of unsound things that Rust can't catch
+//! * C++ and Rust don't agree on how zero-sized/empty types should be handled
+//!
+//! The gecko-ffi feature will not work if you aren't linking with code that has nsTArray
+//! defined. Specifically, we must share the symbol for nsTArray's empty singleton. You will get
+//! linking errors if that isn't defined.
+//!
+//! The gecko-ffi feature also limits ThinVec to the legacy behaviors of nsTArray. Most notably,
+//! nsTArray has a maximum capacity of i32::MAX (~2.1 billion items). Probably not an issue.
+//! Probably.
+//!
+//! [pinned]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/pin/index.html
+
+#![allow(clippy::comparison_chain, clippy::missing_safety_doc)]
+
+use std::alloc::*;
+use std::borrow::*;
+use std::cmp::*;
+use std::hash::*;
+use std::iter::FromIterator;
+use std::marker::PhantomData;
+use std::ops::Bound;
+use std::ops::{Deref, DerefMut, RangeBounds};
+use std::ptr::NonNull;
+use std::slice::IterMut;
+use std::{fmt, io, mem, ptr, slice};
+
+use impl_details::*;
+
+// modules: a simple way to cfg a whole bunch of impl details at once
+
+#[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+mod impl_details {
+ pub type SizeType = usize;
+ pub const MAX_CAP: usize = !0;
+
+ #[inline(always)]
+ pub fn assert_size(x: usize) -> SizeType {
+ x
+ }
+}
+
+#[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+mod impl_details {
+ // Support for briding a gecko nsTArray verbatim into a ThinVec.
+ //
+ // ThinVec can't see copy/move/delete implementations
+ // from C++
+ //
+ // The actual layout of an nsTArray is:
+ //
+ // ```cpp
+ // struct {
+ // uint32_t mLength;
+ // uint32_t mCapacity: 31;
+ // uint32_t mIsAutoArray: 1;
+ // }
+ // ```
+ //
+ // Rust doesn't natively support bit-fields, so we manually mask
+ // and shift the bit. When the "auto" bit is set, the header and buffer
+ // are actually on the stack, meaning the ThinVec pointer-to-header
+ // is essentially an "owned borrow", and therefore dangerous to handle.
+ // There are no safety guards for this situation.
+ //
+ // On little-endian platforms, the auto bit will be the high-bit of
+ // our capacity u32. On big-endian platforms, it will be the low bit.
+ // Hence we need some platform-specific CFGs for the necessary masking/shifting.
+ //
+ // ThinVec won't ever construct an auto array. They only happen when
+ // bridging from C++. This means we don't need to ever set/preserve the bit.
+ // We just need to be able to read and handle it if it happens to be there.
+ //
+ // Handling the auto bit mostly just means not freeing/reallocating the buffer.
+
+ pub type SizeType = u32;
+
+ pub const MAX_CAP: usize = i32::max_value() as usize;
+
+ // Little endian: the auto bit is the high bit, and the capacity is
+ // verbatim. So we just need to mask off the high bit. Note that
+ // this masking is unnecessary when packing, because assert_size
+ // guards against the high bit being set.
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "little")]
+ pub fn pack_capacity(cap: SizeType) -> SizeType {
+ cap as SizeType
+ }
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "little")]
+ pub fn unpack_capacity(cap: SizeType) -> usize {
+ (cap as usize) & !(1 << 31)
+ }
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "little")]
+ pub fn is_auto(cap: SizeType) -> bool {
+ (cap & (1 << 31)) != 0
+ }
+
+ // Big endian: the auto bit is the low bit, and the capacity is
+ // shifted up one bit. Masking out the auto bit is unnecessary,
+ // as rust shifts always shift in 0's for unsigned integers.
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "big")]
+ pub fn pack_capacity(cap: SizeType) -> SizeType {
+ (cap as SizeType) << 1
+ }
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "big")]
+ pub fn unpack_capacity(cap: SizeType) -> usize {
+ (cap >> 1) as usize
+ }
+ #[cfg(target_endian = "big")]
+ pub fn is_auto(cap: SizeType) -> bool {
+ (cap & 1) != 0
+ }
+
+ #[inline]
+ pub fn assert_size(x: usize) -> SizeType {
+ if x > MAX_CAP as usize {
+ panic!("nsTArray size may not exceed the capacity of a 32-bit sized int");
+ }
+ x as SizeType
+ }
+}
+
+// The header of a ThinVec.
+//
+// The _cap can be a bitfield, so use accessors to avoid trouble.
+//
+// In "real" gecko-ffi mode, the empty singleton will be aligned
+// to 8 by gecko. But in tests we have to provide the singleton
+// ourselves, and Rust makes it hard to "just" align a static.
+// To avoid messing around with a wrapper type around the
+// singleton *just* for tests, we just force all headers to be
+// aligned to 8 in this weird "zombie" gecko mode.
+//
+// This shouldn't affect runtime layout (padding), but it will
+// result in us asking the allocator to needlessly overalign
+// non-empty ThinVecs containing align < 8 types in
+// zombie-mode, but not in "real" geck-ffi mode. Minor.
+#[cfg_attr(all(feature = "gecko-ffi", any(test, miri)), repr(align(8)))]
+#[repr(C)]
+struct Header {
+ _len: SizeType,
+ _cap: SizeType,
+}
+
+impl Header {
+ fn len(&self) -> usize {
+ self._len as usize
+ }
+
+ fn set_len(&mut self, len: usize) {
+ self._len = assert_size(len);
+ }
+}
+
+#[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+impl Header {
+ fn cap(&self) -> usize {
+ unpack_capacity(self._cap)
+ }
+
+ fn set_cap(&mut self, cap: usize) {
+ // debug check that our packing is working
+ debug_assert_eq!(unpack_capacity(pack_capacity(cap as SizeType)), cap);
+ // FIXME: this assert is busted because it reads uninit memory
+ // debug_assert!(!self.uses_stack_allocated_buffer());
+
+ // NOTE: this always stores a cleared auto bit, because set_cap
+ // is only invoked by Rust, and Rust doesn't create auto arrays.
+ self._cap = pack_capacity(assert_size(cap));
+ }
+
+ fn uses_stack_allocated_buffer(&self) -> bool {
+ is_auto(self._cap)
+ }
+}
+
+#[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+impl Header {
+ fn cap(&self) -> usize {
+ self._cap as usize
+ }
+
+ fn set_cap(&mut self, cap: usize) {
+ self._cap = assert_size(cap);
+ }
+}
+
+/// Singleton that all empty collections share.
+/// Note: can't store non-zero ZSTs, we allocate in that case. We could
+/// optimize everything to not do that (basically, make ptr == len and branch
+/// on size == 0 in every method), but it's a bunch of work for something that
+/// doesn't matter much.
+#[cfg(any(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"), test, miri))]
+static EMPTY_HEADER: Header = Header { _len: 0, _cap: 0 };
+
+#[cfg(all(feature = "gecko-ffi", not(test), not(miri)))]
+extern "C" {
+ #[link_name = "sEmptyTArrayHeader"]
+ static EMPTY_HEADER: Header;
+}
+
+// TODO: overflow checks everywhere
+
+// Utils for computing layouts of allocations
+
+fn alloc_size<T>(cap: usize) -> usize {
+ // Compute "real" header size with pointer math
+ let header_size = mem::size_of::<Header>();
+ let elem_size = mem::size_of::<T>();
+ let padding = padding::<T>();
+
+ // TODO: care about isize::MAX overflow?
+ let data_size = elem_size.checked_mul(cap).expect("capacity overflow");
+
+ data_size
+ .checked_add(header_size + padding)
+ .expect("capacity overflow")
+}
+
+fn padding<T>() -> usize {
+ let alloc_align = alloc_align::<T>();
+ let header_size = mem::size_of::<Header>();
+
+ if alloc_align > header_size {
+ if cfg!(feature = "gecko-ffi") {
+ panic!(
+ "nsTArray does not handle alignment above > {} correctly",
+ header_size
+ );
+ }
+ alloc_align - header_size
+ } else {
+ 0
+ }
+}
+
+fn alloc_align<T>() -> usize {
+ max(mem::align_of::<T>(), mem::align_of::<Header>())
+}
+
+fn layout<T>(cap: usize) -> Layout {
+ unsafe { Layout::from_size_align_unchecked(alloc_size::<T>(cap), alloc_align::<T>()) }
+}
+
+fn header_with_capacity<T>(cap: usize) -> NonNull<Header> {
+ debug_assert!(cap > 0);
+ unsafe {
+ let layout = layout::<T>(cap);
+ let header = alloc(layout) as *mut Header;
+
+ if header.is_null() {
+ handle_alloc_error(layout)
+ }
+
+ // "Infinite" capacity for zero-sized types:
+ (*header).set_cap(if mem::size_of::<T>() == 0 {
+ MAX_CAP
+ } else {
+ cap
+ });
+ (*header).set_len(0);
+
+ NonNull::new_unchecked(header)
+ }
+}
+
+/// See the crate's top level documentation for a description of this type.
+#[repr(C)]
+pub struct ThinVec<T> {
+ ptr: NonNull<Header>,
+ boo: PhantomData<T>,
+}
+
+unsafe impl<T: Sync> Sync for ThinVec<T> {}
+unsafe impl<T: Send> Send for ThinVec<T> {}
+
+/// Creates a `ThinVec` containing the arguments.
+///
+/// ```
+/// #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+///
+/// fn main() {
+/// let v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+/// assert_eq!(v.len(), 3);
+/// assert_eq!(v[0], 1);
+/// assert_eq!(v[1], 2);
+/// assert_eq!(v[2], 3);
+///
+/// let v = thin_vec![1; 3];
+/// assert_eq!(v, [1, 1, 1]);
+/// }
+/// ```
+#[macro_export]
+macro_rules! thin_vec {
+ (@UNIT $($t:tt)*) => (());
+
+ ($elem:expr; $n:expr) => ({
+ let mut vec = $crate::ThinVec::new();
+ vec.resize($n, $elem);
+ vec
+ });
+ () => {$crate::ThinVec::new()};
+ ($($x:expr),*) => ({
+ let len = [$(thin_vec!(@UNIT $x)),*].len();
+ let mut vec = $crate::ThinVec::with_capacity(len);
+ $(vec.push($x);)*
+ vec
+ });
+ ($($x:expr,)*) => (thin_vec![$($x),*]);
+}
+
+impl<T> ThinVec<T> {
+ pub fn new() -> ThinVec<T> {
+ ThinVec::with_capacity(0)
+ }
+
+ pub fn with_capacity(cap: usize) -> ThinVec<T> {
+ // `padding` contains ~static assertions against types that are
+ // incompatible with the current feature flags. We also call it to
+ // invoke these assertions when getting a pointer to the `ThinVec`
+ // contents, but since we also get a pointer to the contents in the
+ // `Drop` impl, trippng an assertion along that code path causes a
+ // double panic. We duplicate the assertion here so that it is
+ // testable,
+ let _ = padding::<T>();
+
+ if cap == 0 {
+ unsafe {
+ ThinVec {
+ ptr: NonNull::new_unchecked(&EMPTY_HEADER as *const Header as *mut Header),
+ boo: PhantomData,
+ }
+ }
+ } else {
+ ThinVec {
+ ptr: header_with_capacity::<T>(cap),
+ boo: PhantomData,
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ // Accessor conveniences
+
+ fn ptr(&self) -> *mut Header {
+ self.ptr.as_ptr()
+ }
+ fn header(&self) -> &Header {
+ unsafe { self.ptr.as_ref() }
+ }
+ fn data_raw(&self) -> *mut T {
+ // `padding` contains ~static assertions against types that are
+ // incompatible with the current feature flags. Even if we don't
+ // care about its result, we should always call it before getting
+ // a data pointer to guard against invalid types!
+ let padding = padding::<T>();
+
+ // Although we ensure the data array is aligned when we allocate,
+ // we can't do that with the empty singleton. So when it might not
+ // be properly aligned, we substitute in the NonNull::dangling
+ // which *is* aligned.
+ //
+ // To minimize dynamic branches on `cap` for all accesses
+ // to the data, we include this guard which should only involve
+ // compile-time constants. Ideally this should result in the branch
+ // only be included for types with excessive alignment.
+ let empty_header_is_aligned = if cfg!(feature = "gecko-ffi") {
+ // in gecko-ffi mode `padding` will ensure this under
+ // the assumption that the header has size 8 and the
+ // static empty singleton is aligned to 8.
+ true
+ } else {
+ // In non-gecko-ffi mode, the empty singleton is just
+ // naturally aligned to the Header. If the Header is at
+ // least as aligned as T *and* the padding would have
+ // been 0, then one-past-the-end of the empty singleton
+ // *is* a valid data pointer and we can remove the
+ // `dangling` special case.
+ mem::align_of::<Header>() >= mem::align_of::<T>() && padding == 0
+ };
+
+ unsafe {
+ if !empty_header_is_aligned && self.header().cap() == 0 {
+ NonNull::dangling().as_ptr()
+ } else {
+ // This could technically result in overflow, but padding
+ // would have to be absurdly large for this to occur.
+ let header_size = mem::size_of::<Header>();
+ let ptr = self.ptr.as_ptr() as *mut u8;
+ ptr.add(header_size + padding) as *mut T
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ // This is unsafe when the header is EMPTY_HEADER.
+ unsafe fn header_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Header {
+ &mut *self.ptr()
+ }
+
+ pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
+ self.header().len()
+ }
+ pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
+ self.len() == 0
+ }
+ pub fn capacity(&self) -> usize {
+ self.header().cap()
+ }
+
+ pub unsafe fn set_len(&mut self, len: usize) {
+ if self.is_singleton() {
+ // A prerequisite of `Vec::set_len` is that `new_len` must be
+ // less than or equal to capacity(). The same applies here.
+ assert!(len == 0, "invalid set_len({}) on empty ThinVec", len);
+ } else {
+ self.header_mut().set_len(len)
+ }
+ }
+
+ // For internal use only, when setting the length and it's known to be the non-singleton.
+ unsafe fn set_len_non_singleton(&mut self, len: usize) {
+ self.header_mut().set_len(len)
+ }
+
+ pub fn push(&mut self, val: T) {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+ if old_len == self.capacity() {
+ self.reserve(1);
+ }
+ unsafe {
+ ptr::write(self.data_raw().add(old_len), val);
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(old_len + 1);
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn pop(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+ if old_len == 0 {
+ return None;
+ }
+
+ unsafe {
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(old_len - 1);
+ Some(ptr::read(self.data_raw().add(old_len - 1)))
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn insert(&mut self, idx: usize, elem: T) {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+
+ assert!(idx <= old_len, "Index out of bounds");
+ if old_len == self.capacity() {
+ self.reserve(1);
+ }
+ unsafe {
+ let ptr = self.data_raw();
+ ptr::copy(ptr.add(idx), ptr.add(idx + 1), old_len - idx);
+ ptr::write(ptr.add(idx), elem);
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(old_len + 1);
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn remove(&mut self, idx: usize) -> T {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+
+ assert!(idx < old_len, "Index out of bounds");
+
+ unsafe {
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(old_len - 1);
+ let ptr = self.data_raw();
+ let val = ptr::read(self.data_raw().add(idx));
+ ptr::copy(ptr.add(idx + 1), ptr.add(idx), old_len - idx - 1);
+ val
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn swap_remove(&mut self, idx: usize) -> T {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+
+ assert!(idx < old_len, "Index out of bounds");
+
+ unsafe {
+ let ptr = self.data_raw();
+ ptr::swap(ptr.add(idx), ptr.add(old_len - 1));
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(old_len - 1);
+ ptr::read(ptr.add(old_len - 1))
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn truncate(&mut self, len: usize) {
+ unsafe {
+ // drop any extra elements
+ while len < self.len() {
+ // decrement len before the drop_in_place(), so a panic on Drop
+ // doesn't re-drop the just-failed value.
+ let new_len = self.len() - 1;
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(new_len);
+ ptr::drop_in_place(self.data_raw().add(new_len));
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn clear(&mut self) {
+ unsafe {
+ ptr::drop_in_place(&mut self[..]);
+ self.set_len(0); // could be the singleton
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn as_slice(&self) -> &[T] {
+ unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(self.data_raw(), self.len()) }
+ }
+
+ pub fn as_mut_slice(&mut self) -> &mut [T] {
+ unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts_mut(self.data_raw(), self.len()) }
+ }
+
+ /// Reserve capacity for at least `additional` more elements to be inserted.
+ ///
+ /// May reserve more space than requested, to avoid frequent reallocations.
+ ///
+ /// Panics if the new capacity overflows `usize`.
+ ///
+ /// Re-allocates only if `self.capacity() < self.len() + additional`.
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+ pub fn reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) {
+ let len = self.len();
+ let old_cap = self.capacity();
+ let min_cap = len.checked_add(additional).expect("capacity overflow");
+ if min_cap <= old_cap {
+ return;
+ }
+ // Ensure the new capacity is at least double, to guarantee exponential growth.
+ let double_cap = if old_cap == 0 {
+ // skip to 4 because tiny ThinVecs are dumb; but not if that would cause overflow
+ if mem::size_of::<T>() > (!0) / 8 {
+ 1
+ } else {
+ 4
+ }
+ } else {
+ old_cap.saturating_mul(2)
+ };
+ let new_cap = max(min_cap, double_cap);
+ unsafe {
+ self.reallocate(new_cap);
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Reserve capacity for at least `additional` more elements to be inserted.
+ ///
+ /// This method mimics the growth algorithm used by the C++ implementation
+ /// of nsTArray.
+ #[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+ pub fn reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) {
+ let elem_size = mem::size_of::<T>();
+
+ let len = self.len();
+ let old_cap = self.capacity();
+ let min_cap = len.checked_add(additional).expect("capacity overflow");
+ if min_cap <= old_cap {
+ return;
+ }
+
+ // The growth logic can't handle zero-sized types, so we have to exit
+ // early here.
+ if elem_size == 0 {
+ unsafe {
+ self.reallocate(min_cap);
+ }
+ return;
+ }
+
+ let min_cap_bytes = assert_size(min_cap)
+ .checked_mul(assert_size(elem_size))
+ .and_then(|x| x.checked_add(assert_size(mem::size_of::<Header>())))
+ .unwrap();
+
+ // Perform some checked arithmetic to ensure all of the numbers we
+ // compute will end up in range.
+ let will_fit = min_cap_bytes.checked_mul(2).is_some();
+ if !will_fit {
+ panic!("Exceeded maximum nsTArray size");
+ }
+
+ const SLOW_GROWTH_THRESHOLD: usize = 8 * 1024 * 1024;
+
+ let bytes = if min_cap > SLOW_GROWTH_THRESHOLD {
+ // Grow by a minimum of 1.125x
+ let old_cap_bytes = old_cap * elem_size + mem::size_of::<Header>();
+ let min_growth = old_cap_bytes + (old_cap_bytes >> 3);
+ let growth = max(min_growth, min_cap_bytes as usize);
+
+ // Round up to the next megabyte.
+ const MB: usize = 1 << 20;
+ MB * ((growth + MB - 1) / MB)
+ } else {
+ // Try to allocate backing buffers in powers of two.
+ min_cap_bytes.next_power_of_two() as usize
+ };
+
+ let cap = (bytes - std::mem::size_of::<Header>()) / elem_size;
+ unsafe {
+ self.reallocate(cap);
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Reserves the minimum capacity for `additional` more elements to be inserted.
+ ///
+ /// Panics if the new capacity overflows `usize`.
+ ///
+ /// Re-allocates only if `self.capacity() < self.len() + additional`.
+ pub fn reserve_exact(&mut self, additional: usize) {
+ let new_cap = self
+ .len()
+ .checked_add(additional)
+ .expect("capacity overflow");
+ let old_cap = self.capacity();
+ if new_cap > old_cap {
+ unsafe {
+ self.reallocate(new_cap);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn shrink_to_fit(&mut self) {
+ let old_cap = self.capacity();
+ let new_cap = self.len();
+ if new_cap < old_cap {
+ if new_cap == 0 {
+ *self = ThinVec::new();
+ } else {
+ unsafe {
+ self.reallocate(new_cap);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Retains only the elements specified by the predicate.
+ ///
+ /// In other words, remove all elements `e` such that `f(&e)` returns `false`.
+ /// This method operates in place and preserves the order of the retained
+ /// elements.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+ /// # fn main() {
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4];
+ /// vec.retain(|&x| x%2 == 0);
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, [2, 4]);
+ /// # }
+ /// ```
+ pub fn retain<F>(&mut self, mut f: F)
+ where
+ F: FnMut(&T) -> bool,
+ {
+ let len = self.len();
+ let mut del = 0;
+ {
+ let v = &mut self[..];
+
+ for i in 0..len {
+ if !f(&v[i]) {
+ del += 1;
+ } else if del > 0 {
+ v.swap(i - del, i);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ if del > 0 {
+ self.truncate(len - del);
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Removes consecutive elements in the vector that resolve to the same key.
+ ///
+ /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+ /// # fn main() {
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec![10, 20, 21, 30, 20];
+ ///
+ /// vec.dedup_by_key(|i| *i / 10);
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, [10, 20, 30, 20]);
+ /// # }
+ /// ```
+ pub fn dedup_by_key<F, K>(&mut self, mut key: F)
+ where
+ F: FnMut(&mut T) -> K,
+ K: PartialEq<K>,
+ {
+ self.dedup_by(|a, b| key(a) == key(b))
+ }
+
+ /// Removes consecutive elements in the vector according to a predicate.
+ ///
+ /// The `same_bucket` function is passed references to two elements from the vector, and
+ /// returns `true` if the elements compare equal, or `false` if they do not. Only the first
+ /// of adjacent equal items is kept.
+ ///
+ /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+ /// # fn main() {
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec!["foo", "bar", "Bar", "baz", "bar"];
+ ///
+ /// vec.dedup_by(|a, b| a.eq_ignore_ascii_case(b));
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, ["foo", "bar", "baz", "bar"]);
+ /// # }
+ /// ```
+ #[allow(clippy::swap_ptr_to_ref)]
+ pub fn dedup_by<F>(&mut self, mut same_bucket: F)
+ where
+ F: FnMut(&mut T, &mut T) -> bool,
+ {
+ // See the comments in `Vec::dedup` for a detailed explanation of this code.
+ unsafe {
+ let ln = self.len();
+ if ln <= 1 {
+ return;
+ }
+
+ // Avoid bounds checks by using raw pointers.
+ let p = self.as_mut_ptr();
+ let mut r: usize = 1;
+ let mut w: usize = 1;
+
+ while r < ln {
+ let p_r = p.add(r);
+ let p_wm1 = p.add(w - 1);
+ if !same_bucket(&mut *p_r, &mut *p_wm1) {
+ if r != w {
+ let p_w = p_wm1.add(1);
+ mem::swap(&mut *p_r, &mut *p_w);
+ }
+ w += 1;
+ }
+ r += 1;
+ }
+
+ self.truncate(w);
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn split_off(&mut self, at: usize) -> ThinVec<T> {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+ let new_vec_len = old_len - at;
+
+ assert!(at <= old_len, "Index out of bounds");
+
+ unsafe {
+ let mut new_vec = ThinVec::with_capacity(new_vec_len);
+
+ ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(self.data_raw().add(at), new_vec.data_raw(), new_vec_len);
+
+ new_vec.set_len(new_vec_len); // could be the singleton
+ self.set_len(at); // could be the singleton
+
+ new_vec
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn append(&mut self, other: &mut ThinVec<T>) {
+ self.extend(other.drain(..))
+ }
+
+ pub fn drain<R>(&mut self, range: R) -> Drain<'_, T>
+ where
+ R: RangeBounds<usize>,
+ {
+ let len = self.len();
+ let start = match range.start_bound() {
+ Bound::Included(&n) => n,
+ Bound::Excluded(&n) => n + 1,
+ Bound::Unbounded => 0,
+ };
+ let end = match range.end_bound() {
+ Bound::Included(&n) => n + 1,
+ Bound::Excluded(&n) => n,
+ Bound::Unbounded => len,
+ };
+ assert!(start <= end);
+ assert!(end <= len);
+
+ unsafe {
+ // Set our length to the start bound
+ self.set_len(start); // could be the singleton
+
+ let iter =
+ slice::from_raw_parts_mut(self.data_raw().add(start), end - start).iter_mut();
+
+ Drain {
+ iter,
+ vec: self,
+ end,
+ tail: len - end,
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Resize the buffer and update its capacity, without changing the length.
+ /// Unsafe because it can cause length to be greater than capacity.
+ unsafe fn reallocate(&mut self, new_cap: usize) {
+ debug_assert!(new_cap > 0);
+ if self.has_allocation() {
+ let old_cap = self.capacity();
+ let ptr = realloc(
+ self.ptr() as *mut u8,
+ layout::<T>(old_cap),
+ alloc_size::<T>(new_cap),
+ ) as *mut Header;
+
+ if ptr.is_null() {
+ handle_alloc_error(layout::<T>(new_cap))
+ }
+ (*ptr).set_cap(new_cap);
+ self.ptr = NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr);
+ } else {
+ let new_header = header_with_capacity::<T>(new_cap);
+
+ // If we get here and have a non-zero len, then we must be handling
+ // a gecko auto array, and we have items in a stack buffer. We shouldn't
+ // free it, but we should memcopy the contents out of it and mark it as empty.
+ //
+ // T is assumed to be trivially relocatable, as this is ~required
+ // for Rust compatibility anyway. Furthermore, we assume C++ won't try
+ // to unconditionally destroy the contents of the stack allocated buffer
+ // (i.e. it's obfuscated behind a union).
+ //
+ // In effect, we are partially reimplementing the auto array move constructor
+ // by leaving behind a valid empty instance.
+ let len = self.len();
+ if cfg!(feature = "gecko-ffi") && len > 0 {
+ new_header
+ .as_ptr()
+ .add(1)
+ .cast::<T>()
+ .copy_from_nonoverlapping(self.data_raw(), len);
+ self.set_len_non_singleton(0);
+ }
+
+ self.ptr = new_header;
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+ #[inline]
+ fn is_singleton(&self) -> bool {
+ unsafe { self.ptr.as_ptr() as *const Header == &EMPTY_HEADER }
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+ #[inline]
+ fn is_singleton(&self) -> bool {
+ self.ptr.as_ptr() as *const Header == &EMPTY_HEADER
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+ #[inline]
+ fn has_allocation(&self) -> bool {
+ unsafe { !self.is_singleton() && !self.ptr.as_ref().uses_stack_allocated_buffer() }
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+ #[inline]
+ fn has_allocation(&self) -> bool {
+ !self.is_singleton()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T: Clone> ThinVec<T> {
+ /// 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.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+ /// # fn main() {
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec!["hello"];
+ /// vec.resize(3, "world");
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, ["hello", "world", "world"]);
+ ///
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4];
+ /// vec.resize(2, 0);
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2]);
+ /// # }
+ /// ```
+ pub fn resize(&mut self, new_len: usize, value: T) {
+ let old_len = self.len();
+
+ if new_len > old_len {
+ let additional = new_len - old_len;
+ self.reserve(additional);
+ for _ in 1..additional {
+ self.push(value.clone());
+ }
+ // We can write the last element directly without cloning needlessly
+ if additional > 0 {
+ self.push(value);
+ }
+ } else if new_len < old_len {
+ self.truncate(new_len);
+ }
+ }
+
+ pub fn extend_from_slice(&mut self, other: &[T]) {
+ self.extend(other.iter().cloned())
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T: PartialEq> ThinVec<T> {
+ /// Removes consecutive repeated elements in the vector.
+ ///
+ /// If the vector is sorted, this removes all duplicates.
+ ///
+ /// # Examples
+ ///
+ /// ```
+ /// # #[macro_use] extern crate thin_vec;
+ /// # fn main() {
+ /// let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 2, 3, 2];
+ ///
+ /// vec.dedup();
+ ///
+ /// assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 2]);
+ /// # }
+ /// ```
+ pub fn dedup(&mut self) {
+ self.dedup_by(|a, b| a == b)
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Drop for ThinVec<T> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ #[cold]
+ #[inline(never)]
+ fn drop_non_singleton<T>(this: &mut ThinVec<T>) {
+ unsafe {
+ ptr::drop_in_place(&mut this[..]);
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "gecko-ffi")]
+ if this.ptr.as_ref().uses_stack_allocated_buffer() {
+ return;
+ }
+
+ dealloc(this.ptr() as *mut u8, layout::<T>(this.capacity()))
+ }
+ }
+
+ if !self.is_singleton() {
+ drop_non_singleton(self);
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Deref for ThinVec<T> {
+ type Target = [T];
+
+ fn deref(&self) -> &[T] {
+ self.as_slice()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> DerefMut for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [T] {
+ self.as_mut_slice()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Borrow<[T]> for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn borrow(&self) -> &[T] {
+ self.as_slice()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> BorrowMut<[T]> for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [T] {
+ self.as_mut_slice()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> AsRef<[T]> for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn as_ref(&self) -> &[T] {
+ self.as_slice()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Extend<T> for ThinVec<T> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
+ where
+ I: IntoIterator<Item = T>,
+ {
+ let iter = iter.into_iter();
+ let hint = iter.size_hint().0;
+ if hint > 0 {
+ self.reserve(hint);
+ }
+ for x in iter {
+ self.push(x);
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T: fmt::Debug> fmt::Debug for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
+ fmt::Debug::fmt(&**self, f)
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Hash for ThinVec<T>
+where
+ T: Hash,
+{
+ fn hash<H>(&self, state: &mut H)
+ where
+ H: Hasher,
+ {
+ self[..].hash(state);
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> PartialOrd for ThinVec<T>
+where
+ T: PartialOrd,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &ThinVec<T>) -> Option<Ordering> {
+ self[..].partial_cmp(&other[..])
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Ord for ThinVec<T>
+where
+ T: Ord,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn cmp(&self, other: &ThinVec<T>) -> Ordering {
+ self[..].cmp(&other[..])
+ }
+}
+
+impl<A, B> PartialEq<ThinVec<B>> for ThinVec<A>
+where
+ A: PartialEq<B>,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &ThinVec<B>) -> bool {
+ self[..] == other[..]
+ }
+}
+
+impl<A, B> PartialEq<Vec<B>> for ThinVec<A>
+where
+ A: PartialEq<B>,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &Vec<B>) -> bool {
+ self[..] == other[..]
+ }
+}
+
+impl<A, B> PartialEq<[B]> for ThinVec<A>
+where
+ A: PartialEq<B>,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &[B]) -> bool {
+ self[..] == other[..]
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, A, B> PartialEq<&'a [B]> for ThinVec<A>
+where
+ A: PartialEq<B>,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &&'a [B]) -> bool {
+ self[..] == other[..]
+ }
+}
+
+// Serde impls based on
+// https://github.com/bluss/arrayvec/blob/67ec907a98c0f40c4b76066fed3c1af59d35cf6a/src/arrayvec.rs#L1222-L1267
+#[cfg(feature = "serde")]
+impl<T: serde::Serialize> serde::Serialize for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn serialize<S>(&self, serializer: S) -> Result<S::Ok, S::Error>
+ where
+ S: serde::Serializer,
+ {
+ serializer.collect_seq(self.as_slice())
+ }
+}
+
+#[cfg(feature = "serde")]
+impl<'de, T: serde::Deserialize<'de>> serde::Deserialize<'de> for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn deserialize<D>(deserializer: D) -> Result<Self, D::Error>
+ where
+ D: serde::Deserializer<'de>,
+ {
+ use serde::de::{SeqAccess, Visitor};
+ use serde::Deserialize;
+
+ struct ThinVecVisitor<T>(PhantomData<T>);
+
+ impl<'de, T: Deserialize<'de>> Visitor<'de> for ThinVecVisitor<T> {
+ type Value = ThinVec<T>;
+
+ fn expecting(&self, formatter: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
+ write!(formatter, "a sequence")
+ }
+
+ fn visit_seq<SA>(self, mut seq: SA) -> Result<Self::Value, SA::Error>
+ where
+ SA: SeqAccess<'de>,
+ {
+ // Same policy as
+ // https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/blob/ce0844b9ecc32377b5e4545d759d385a8c46bc6a/serde/src/private/size_hint.rs#L13
+ let initial_capacity = seq.size_hint().unwrap_or_default().min(4096);
+ let mut values = ThinVec::<T>::with_capacity(initial_capacity);
+
+ while let Some(value) = seq.next_element()? {
+ values.push(value);
+ }
+
+ Ok(values)
+ }
+ }
+
+ deserializer.deserialize_seq(ThinVecVisitor::<T>(PhantomData))
+ }
+}
+
+macro_rules! array_impls {
+ ($($N:expr)*) => {$(
+ impl<A, B> PartialEq<[B; $N]> for ThinVec<A> where A: PartialEq<B> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &[B; $N]) -> bool { self[..] == other[..] }
+ }
+
+ impl<'a, A, B> PartialEq<&'a [B; $N]> for ThinVec<A> where A: PartialEq<B> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn eq(&self, other: &&'a [B; $N]) -> bool { self[..] == other[..] }
+ }
+ )*}
+}
+
+array_impls! {
+ 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
+ 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
+ 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
+ 30 31 32
+}
+
+impl<T> Eq for ThinVec<T> where T: Eq {}
+
+impl<T> IntoIterator for ThinVec<T> {
+ type Item = T;
+ type IntoIter = IntoIter<T>;
+
+ fn into_iter(self) -> IntoIter<T> {
+ IntoIter {
+ vec: self,
+ start: 0,
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, T> IntoIterator for &'a ThinVec<T> {
+ type Item = &'a T;
+ type IntoIter = slice::Iter<'a, T>;
+
+ fn into_iter(self) -> slice::Iter<'a, T> {
+ self.iter()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, T> IntoIterator for &'a mut ThinVec<T> {
+ type Item = &'a mut T;
+ type IntoIter = slice::IterMut<'a, T>;
+
+ fn into_iter(self) -> slice::IterMut<'a, T> {
+ self.iter_mut()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Clone for ThinVec<T>
+where
+ T: Clone,
+{
+ #[inline]
+ fn clone(&self) -> ThinVec<T> {
+ #[cold]
+ #[inline(never)]
+ fn clone_non_singleton<T: Clone>(this: &ThinVec<T>) -> ThinVec<T> {
+ let len = this.len();
+ let mut new_vec = ThinVec::<T>::with_capacity(len);
+ let mut data_raw = new_vec.data_raw();
+ for x in this.iter() {
+ unsafe {
+ ptr::write(data_raw, x.clone());
+ data_raw = data_raw.add(1);
+ }
+ }
+ unsafe {
+ // `this` is not the singleton, but `new_vec` will be if
+ // `this` is empty.
+ new_vec.set_len(len); // could be the singleton
+ }
+ new_vec
+ }
+
+ if self.is_singleton() {
+ ThinVec::new()
+ } else {
+ clone_non_singleton(self)
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Default for ThinVec<T> {
+ fn default() -> ThinVec<T> {
+ ThinVec::new()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> FromIterator<T> for ThinVec<T> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn from_iter<I: IntoIterator<Item = T>>(iter: I) -> ThinVec<T> {
+ let mut vec = ThinVec::new();
+ vec.extend(iter.into_iter());
+ vec
+ }
+}
+
+pub struct IntoIter<T> {
+ vec: ThinVec<T>,
+ start: usize,
+}
+
+pub struct Drain<'a, T> {
+ iter: IterMut<'a, T>,
+ vec: *mut ThinVec<T>,
+ end: usize,
+ tail: usize,
+}
+
+impl<T> Iterator for IntoIter<T> {
+ type Item = T;
+ fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
+ if self.start == self.vec.len() {
+ None
+ } else {
+ unsafe {
+ let old_start = self.start;
+ self.start += 1;
+ Some(ptr::read(self.vec.data_raw().add(old_start)))
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
+ let len = self.vec.len() - self.start;
+ (len, Some(len))
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> DoubleEndedIterator for IntoIter<T> {
+ fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
+ if self.start == self.vec.len() {
+ None
+ } else {
+ // FIXME?: extra bounds check
+ self.vec.pop()
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<T> Drop for IntoIter<T> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ #[cold]
+ #[inline(never)]
+ fn drop_non_singleton<T>(this: &mut IntoIter<T>) {
+ unsafe {
+ let mut vec = mem::replace(&mut this.vec, ThinVec::new());
+ ptr::drop_in_place(&mut vec[this.start..]);
+ vec.set_len_non_singleton(0)
+ }
+ }
+
+ if !self.vec.is_singleton() {
+ drop_non_singleton(self);
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, T> Iterator for Drain<'a, T> {
+ type Item = T;
+ fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
+ self.iter.next().map(|x| unsafe { ptr::read(x) })
+ }
+
+ fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
+ self.iter.size_hint()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, T> DoubleEndedIterator for Drain<'a, T> {
+ fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
+ self.iter.next_back().map(|x| unsafe { ptr::read(x) })
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, T> ExactSizeIterator for Drain<'a, T> {}
+
+impl<'a, T> Drop for Drain<'a, T> {
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ // Consume the rest of the iterator.
+ for _ in self.by_ref() {}
+
+ // Move the tail over the drained items, and update the length.
+ unsafe {
+ let vec = &mut *self.vec;
+
+ // Don't mutate the empty singleton!
+ if !vec.is_singleton() {
+ let old_len = vec.len();
+ let start = vec.data_raw().add(old_len);
+ let end = vec.data_raw().add(self.end);
+ ptr::copy(end, start, self.tail);
+ vec.set_len_non_singleton(old_len + self.tail);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+/// Write is implemented for `ThinVec<u8>` by appending to the vector.
+/// The vector will grow as needed.
+/// This implementation is identical to the one for `Vec<u8>`.
+impl io::Write for ThinVec<u8> {
+ #[inline]
+ fn write(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> io::Result<usize> {
+ self.extend_from_slice(buf);
+ Ok(buf.len())
+ }
+
+ #[inline]
+ fn write_all(&mut self, buf: &[u8]) -> io::Result<()> {
+ self.extend_from_slice(buf);
+ Ok(())
+ }
+
+ #[inline]
+ fn flush(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
+ Ok(())
+ }
+}
+
+// TODO: a million Index impls
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod tests {
+ use super::{ThinVec, MAX_CAP};
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_size_of() {
+ use std::mem::size_of;
+ assert_eq!(size_of::<ThinVec<u8>>(), size_of::<&u8>());
+
+ assert_eq!(size_of::<Option<ThinVec<u8>>>(), size_of::<&u8>());
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drop_empty() {
+ ThinVec::<u8>::new();
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_data_ptr_alignment() {
+ let v = ThinVec::<u16>::new();
+ assert!(v.data_raw() as usize % 2 == 0);
+
+ let v = ThinVec::<u32>::new();
+ assert!(v.data_raw() as usize % 4 == 0);
+
+ let v = ThinVec::<u64>::new();
+ assert!(v.data_raw() as usize % 8 == 0);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg_attr(feature = "gecko-ffi", should_panic)]
+ fn test_overaligned_type_is_rejected_for_gecko_ffi_mode() {
+ #[repr(align(16))]
+ struct Align16(u8);
+
+ let v = ThinVec::<Align16>::new();
+ assert!(v.data_raw() as usize % 16 == 0);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_partial_eq() {
+ assert_eq!(thin_vec![0], thin_vec![0]);
+ assert_ne!(thin_vec![0], thin_vec![1]);
+ assert_eq!(thin_vec![1, 2, 3], vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_alloc() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::new();
+ assert!(!v.has_allocation());
+ v.push(1);
+ assert!(v.has_allocation());
+ v.pop();
+ assert!(v.has_allocation());
+ v.shrink_to_fit();
+ assert!(!v.has_allocation());
+ v.reserve(64);
+ assert!(v.has_allocation());
+ v = ThinVec::with_capacity(64);
+ assert!(v.has_allocation());
+ v = ThinVec::with_capacity(0);
+ assert!(!v.has_allocation());
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..) {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items_reverse() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..).rev() {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [3, 2, 1]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items_zero_sized() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![(), (), ()];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..) {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [(), (), ()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_drain_out_of_bounds() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ v.drain(5..6);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_range() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ for _ in v.drain(4..) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 2, 3, 4]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (1..6).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1.to_string(), 5.to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (1..6).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4).rev() {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1.to_string(), 5.to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = thin_vec![(); 5];
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4).rev() {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[(), ()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_max_vec_size() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<()>::with_capacity(MAX_CAP);
+ unsafe {
+ v.set_len(MAX_CAP);
+ }
+ for _ in v.drain(MAX_CAP - 1..) {}
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), MAX_CAP - 1);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_clear() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ v.clear();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ v.push(1);
+ v.push(2);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 2);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[1, 2]);
+
+ v.clear();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ v.push(3);
+ v.push(4);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 2);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[3, 4]);
+
+ v.clear();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ v.clear();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_empty_singleton_torture() {
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert!(v.is_empty());
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ assert_eq!(&mut v[..], &mut []);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.pop(), None);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.into_iter().count(), 0);
+
+ let v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ for _ in v.into_iter() {
+ unreachable!();
+ }
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.drain(..).len(), 0);
+
+ for _ in v.drain(..) {
+ unreachable!()
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.truncate(1);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ v.truncate(0);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.shrink_to_fit();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ let new = v.split_off(0);
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ assert_eq!(new.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(new.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&new[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ let mut other = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.append(&mut other);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+
+ assert_eq!(other.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(other.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&other[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.reserve(0);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.reserve_exact(0);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.reserve(0);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let v = ThinVec::<i32>::with_capacity(0);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let v = ThinVec::<i32>::default();
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.retain(|_| unreachable!());
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.dedup_by_key(|x| *x);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ v.dedup_by(|_, _| unreachable!());
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+
+ {
+ let v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ let v = v.clone();
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], &[]);
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_clone() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ assert!(v.is_singleton());
+ v.push(0);
+ v.pop();
+ assert!(!v.is_singleton());
+
+ let v2 = v.clone();
+ assert!(v2.is_singleton());
+ }
+}
+
+#[cfg(test)]
+mod std_tests {
+ #![allow(clippy::reversed_empty_ranges)]
+
+ use super::*;
+ use std::mem::size_of;
+ use std::usize;
+
+ struct DropCounter<'a> {
+ count: &'a mut u32,
+ }
+
+ impl<'a> Drop for DropCounter<'a> {
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ *self.count += 1;
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_small_vec_struct() {
+ assert!(size_of::<ThinVec<u8>>() == size_of::<usize>());
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_double_drop() {
+ struct TwoVec<T> {
+ x: ThinVec<T>,
+ y: ThinVec<T>,
+ }
+
+ let (mut count_x, mut count_y) = (0, 0);
+ {
+ let mut tv = TwoVec {
+ x: ThinVec::new(),
+ y: ThinVec::new(),
+ };
+ tv.x.push(DropCounter {
+ count: &mut count_x,
+ });
+ tv.y.push(DropCounter {
+ count: &mut count_y,
+ });
+
+ // If ThinVec had a drop flag, here is where it would be zeroed.
+ // Instead, it should rely on its internal state to prevent
+ // doing anything significant when dropped multiple times.
+ drop(tv.x);
+
+ // Here tv goes out of scope, tv.y should be dropped, but not tv.x.
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(count_x, 1);
+ assert_eq!(count_y, 1);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_reserve() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+
+ v.reserve(2);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+
+ for i in 0..16 {
+ v.push(i);
+ }
+
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 16);
+ v.reserve(16);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 32);
+
+ v.push(16);
+
+ v.reserve(16);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 33)
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_extend() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<usize>::new();
+ let mut w = ThinVec::new();
+ v.extend(w.clone());
+ assert_eq!(v, &[]);
+
+ v.extend(0..3);
+ for i in 0..3 {
+ w.push(i)
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(v, w);
+
+ v.extend(3..10);
+ for i in 3..10 {
+ w.push(i)
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(v, w);
+
+ v.extend(w.clone()); // specializes to `append`
+ assert!(v.iter().eq(w.iter().chain(w.iter())));
+
+ // Zero sized types
+ #[derive(PartialEq, Debug)]
+ struct Foo;
+
+ let mut a = ThinVec::new();
+ let b = thin_vec![Foo, Foo];
+
+ a.extend(b);
+ assert_eq!(a, &[Foo, Foo]);
+
+ // Double drop
+ let mut count_x = 0;
+ {
+ let mut x = ThinVec::new();
+ let y = thin_vec![DropCounter {
+ count: &mut count_x
+ }];
+ x.extend(y);
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(count_x, 1);
+ }
+
+ /* TODO: implement extend for Iter<&Copy>
+ #[test]
+ fn test_extend_ref() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2];
+ v.extend(&[3, 4, 5]);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 5);
+ assert_eq!(v, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
+
+ let w = thin_vec![6, 7];
+ v.extend(&w);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 7);
+ assert_eq!(v, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]);
+ }
+ */
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_slice_from_mut() {
+ let mut values = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ {
+ let slice = &mut values[2..];
+ assert!(slice == [3, 4, 5]);
+ for p in slice {
+ *p += 2;
+ }
+ }
+
+ assert!(values == [1, 2, 5, 6, 7]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_slice_to_mut() {
+ let mut values = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ {
+ let slice = &mut values[..2];
+ assert!(slice == [1, 2]);
+ for p in slice {
+ *p += 1;
+ }
+ }
+
+ assert!(values == [2, 3, 3, 4, 5]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_split_at_mut() {
+ let mut values = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ {
+ let (left, right) = values.split_at_mut(2);
+ {
+ let left: &[_] = left;
+ assert!(left[..left.len()] == [1, 2]);
+ }
+ for p in left {
+ *p += 1;
+ }
+
+ {
+ let right: &[_] = right;
+ assert!(right[..right.len()] == [3, 4, 5]);
+ }
+ for p in right {
+ *p += 2;
+ }
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(values, [2, 3, 5, 6, 7]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_clone() {
+ let v: ThinVec<i32> = thin_vec![];
+ let w = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+
+ assert_eq!(v, v.clone());
+
+ let z = w.clone();
+ assert_eq!(w, z);
+ // they should be disjoint in memory.
+ assert!(w.as_ptr() != z.as_ptr())
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_clone_from() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![];
+ let three: ThinVec<Box<_>> = thin_vec![Box::new(1), Box::new(2), Box::new(3)];
+ let two: ThinVec<Box<_>> = thin_vec![Box::new(4), Box::new(5)];
+ // zero, long
+ v.clone_from(&three);
+ assert_eq!(v, three);
+
+ // equal
+ v.clone_from(&three);
+ assert_eq!(v, three);
+
+ // long, short
+ v.clone_from(&two);
+ assert_eq!(v, two);
+
+ // short, long
+ v.clone_from(&three);
+ assert_eq!(v, three)
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_retain() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4];
+ vec.retain(|&x| x % 2 == 0);
+ assert_eq!(vec, [2, 4]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_dedup() {
+ fn case(a: ThinVec<i32>, b: ThinVec<i32>) {
+ let mut v = a;
+ v.dedup();
+ assert_eq!(v, b);
+ }
+ case(thin_vec![], thin_vec![]);
+ case(thin_vec![1], thin_vec![1]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 1], thin_vec![1]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 2, 3], thin_vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 1, 2, 3], thin_vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 2, 2, 3], thin_vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 3], thin_vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ case(thin_vec![1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3], thin_vec![1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_dedup_by_key() {
+ fn case(a: ThinVec<i32>, b: ThinVec<i32>) {
+ let mut v = a;
+ v.dedup_by_key(|i| *i / 10);
+ assert_eq!(v, b);
+ }
+ case(thin_vec![], thin_vec![]);
+ case(thin_vec![10], thin_vec![10]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 11], thin_vec![10]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 20, 30], thin_vec![10, 20, 30]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 11, 20, 30], thin_vec![10, 20, 30]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 20, 21, 30], thin_vec![10, 20, 30]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 20, 30, 31], thin_vec![10, 20, 30]);
+ case(thin_vec![10, 11, 20, 21, 22, 30, 31], thin_vec![10, 20, 30]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_dedup_by() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec!["foo", "bar", "Bar", "baz", "bar"];
+ vec.dedup_by(|a, b| a.eq_ignore_ascii_case(b));
+
+ assert_eq!(vec, ["foo", "bar", "baz", "bar"]);
+
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![("foo", 1), ("foo", 2), ("bar", 3), ("bar", 4), ("bar", 5)];
+ vec.dedup_by(|a, b| {
+ a.0 == b.0 && {
+ b.1 += a.1;
+ true
+ }
+ });
+
+ assert_eq!(vec, [("foo", 3), ("bar", 12)]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_dedup_unique() {
+ let mut v0: ThinVec<Box<_>> = thin_vec![Box::new(1), Box::new(1), Box::new(2), Box::new(3)];
+ v0.dedup();
+ let mut v1: ThinVec<Box<_>> = thin_vec![Box::new(1), Box::new(2), Box::new(2), Box::new(3)];
+ v1.dedup();
+ let mut v2: ThinVec<Box<_>> = thin_vec![Box::new(1), Box::new(2), Box::new(3), Box::new(3)];
+ v2.dedup();
+ // If the boxed pointers were leaked or otherwise misused, valgrind
+ // and/or rt should raise errors.
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn zero_sized_values() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 0);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 1);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), 2);
+ assert_eq!(v.pop(), Some(()));
+ assert_eq!(v.pop(), Some(()));
+ assert_eq!(v.pop(), None);
+
+ assert_eq!(v.iter().count(), 0);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.iter().count(), 1);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.iter().count(), 2);
+
+ for &() in &v {}
+
+ assert_eq!(v.iter_mut().count(), 2);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.iter_mut().count(), 3);
+ v.push(());
+ assert_eq!(v.iter_mut().count(), 4);
+
+ for &mut () in &mut v {}
+ unsafe {
+ v.set_len(0);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(v.iter_mut().count(), 0);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_partition() {
+ assert_eq!(
+ thin_vec![].into_iter().partition(|x: &i32| *x < 3),
+ (thin_vec![], thin_vec![])
+ );
+ assert_eq!(
+ thin_vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().partition(|x| *x < 4),
+ (thin_vec![1, 2, 3], thin_vec![])
+ );
+ assert_eq!(
+ thin_vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().partition(|x| *x < 2),
+ (thin_vec![1], thin_vec![2, 3])
+ );
+ assert_eq!(
+ thin_vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().partition(|x| *x < 0),
+ (thin_vec![], thin_vec![1, 2, 3])
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_zip_unzip() {
+ let z1 = thin_vec![(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)];
+
+ let (left, right): (ThinVec<_>, ThinVec<_>) = z1.iter().cloned().unzip();
+
+ assert_eq!((1, 4), (left[0], right[0]));
+ assert_eq!((2, 5), (left[1], right[1]));
+ assert_eq!((3, 6), (left[2], right[2]));
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_vec_truncate_drop() {
+ static mut DROPS: u32 = 0;
+ struct Elem(i32);
+ impl Drop for Elem {
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ unsafe {
+ DROPS += 1;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ let mut v = thin_vec![Elem(1), Elem(2), Elem(3), Elem(4), Elem(5)];
+ assert_eq!(unsafe { DROPS }, 0);
+ v.truncate(3);
+ assert_eq!(unsafe { DROPS }, 2);
+ v.truncate(0);
+ assert_eq!(unsafe { DROPS }, 5);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_vec_truncate_fail() {
+ struct BadElem(i32);
+ impl Drop for BadElem {
+ fn drop(&mut self) {
+ let BadElem(ref mut x) = *self;
+ if *x == 0xbadbeef {
+ panic!("BadElem panic: 0xbadbeef")
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ let mut v = thin_vec![BadElem(1), BadElem(2), BadElem(0xbadbeef), BadElem(4)];
+ v.truncate(0);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_index() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ assert!(vec[1] == 2);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_index_out_of_bounds() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let _ = vec[3];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_slice_out_of_bounds_1() {
+ let x = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let _ = &x[!0..];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_slice_out_of_bounds_2() {
+ let x = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let _ = &x[..6];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_slice_out_of_bounds_3() {
+ let x = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let _ = &x[!0..4];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_slice_out_of_bounds_4() {
+ let x = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let _ = &x[1..6];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_slice_out_of_bounds_5() {
+ let x = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let _ = &x[3..2];
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_swap_remove_empty() {
+ let mut vec = ThinVec::<i32>::new();
+ vec.swap_remove(0);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_move_items() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_move_items_reverse() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.into_iter().rev() {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [3, 2, 1]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_move_items_zero_sized() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![(), (), ()];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [(), (), ()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..) {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items_reverse() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..).rev() {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [3, 2, 1]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_items_zero_sized() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![(), (), ()];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ for i in vec.drain(..) {
+ vec2.push(i);
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec, []);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [(), (), ()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_drain_out_of_bounds() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ v.drain(5..6);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_range() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ for _ in v.drain(4..) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 2, 3, 4]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (1..6).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1.to_string(), 5.to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (1..6).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4).rev() {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1.to_string(), 5.to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = thin_vec![(); 5];
+ for _ in v.drain(1..4).rev() {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &[(), ()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_drain_inclusive_range() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec!['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e'];
+ for _ in v.drain(1..=3) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &['a', 'e']);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (0..=5).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(1..=5) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &["0".to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<String> = (0..=5).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(0..=5) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, ThinVec::<String>::new());
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (0..=5).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(0..=3) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &["4".to_string(), "5".to_string()]);
+
+ let mut v: ThinVec<_> = (0..=1).map(|x| x.to_string()).collect();
+ for _ in v.drain(..=0) {}
+ assert_eq!(v, &["1".to_string()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(not(feature = "gecko-ffi"))]
+ fn test_drain_max_vec_size() {
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<()>::with_capacity(usize::max_value());
+ unsafe {
+ v.set_len(usize::max_value());
+ }
+ for _ in v.drain(usize::max_value() - 1..) {}
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), usize::max_value() - 1);
+
+ let mut v = ThinVec::<()>::with_capacity(usize::max_value());
+ unsafe {
+ v.set_len(usize::max_value());
+ }
+ for _ in v.drain(usize::max_value() - 1..=usize::max_value() - 1) {}
+ assert_eq!(v.len(), usize::max_value() - 1);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_drain_inclusive_out_of_bounds() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ v.drain(5..=5);
+ }
+
+ /* TODO: implement splice?
+ #[test]
+ fn test_splice() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let a = [10, 11, 12];
+ v.splice(2..4, a.iter().cloned());
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 2, 10, 11, 12, 5]);
+ v.splice(1..3, Some(20));
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 20, 11, 12, 5]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_splice_inclusive_range() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let a = [10, 11, 12];
+ let t1: ThinVec<_> = v.splice(2..=3, a.iter().cloned()).collect();
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 2, 10, 11, 12, 5]);
+ assert_eq!(t1, &[3, 4]);
+ let t2: ThinVec<_> = v.splice(1..=2, Some(20)).collect();
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 20, 11, 12, 5]);
+ assert_eq!(t2, &[2, 10]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_splice_out_of_bounds() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let a = [10, 11, 12];
+ v.splice(5..6, a.iter().cloned());
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic]
+ fn test_splice_inclusive_out_of_bounds() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let a = [10, 11, 12];
+ v.splice(5..=5, a.iter().cloned());
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_splice_items_zero_sized() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![(), (), ()];
+ let vec2 = thin_vec![];
+ let t: ThinVec<_> = vec.splice(1..2, vec2.iter().cloned()).collect();
+ assert_eq!(vec, &[(), ()]);
+ assert_eq!(t, &[()]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_splice_unbounded() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let t: ThinVec<_> = vec.splice(.., None).collect();
+ assert_eq!(vec, &[]);
+ assert_eq!(t, &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_splice_forget() {
+ let mut v = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
+ let a = [10, 11, 12];
+ ::std::mem::forget(v.splice(2..4, a.iter().cloned()));
+ assert_eq!(v, &[1, 2]);
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* probs won't ever impl this
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_boxed_slice() {
+ let xs = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let ys = xs.into_boxed_slice();
+ assert_eq!(&*ys, [1, 2, 3]);
+ }
+ */
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_append() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let mut vec2 = thin_vec![4, 5, 6];
+ vec.append(&mut vec2);
+ assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, []);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_split_off() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
+ let vec2 = vec.split_off(4);
+ assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3, 4]);
+ assert_eq!(vec2, [5, 6]);
+ }
+
+ /* TODO: implement into_iter methods?
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_iter_as_slice() {
+ let vec = thin_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']);
+ let _ = into_iter.next().unwrap();
+ let _ = into_iter.next().unwrap();
+ assert_eq!(into_iter.as_slice(), &[]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_iter_as_mut_slice() {
+ let vec = thin_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()[0] = 'x';
+ into_iter.as_mut_slice()[1] = 'y';
+ assert_eq!(into_iter.next().unwrap(), 'x');
+ assert_eq!(into_iter.as_slice(), &['y', 'c']);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_iter_debug() {
+ let vec = thin_vec!['a', 'b', 'c'];
+ let into_iter = vec.into_iter();
+ let debug = format!("{:?}", into_iter);
+ assert_eq!(debug, "IntoIter(['a', 'b', 'c'])");
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_iter_count() {
+ assert_eq!(thin_vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().count(), 3);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_into_iter_clone() {
+ fn iter_equal<I: Iterator<Item = i32>>(it: I, slice: &[i32]) {
+ let v: ThinVec<i32> = it.collect();
+ assert_eq!(&v[..], slice);
+ }
+ let mut it = thin_vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter();
+ iter_equal(it.clone(), &[1, 2, 3]);
+ assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(1));
+ let mut it = it.rev();
+ iter_equal(it.clone(), &[3, 2]);
+ assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(3));
+ iter_equal(it.clone(), &[2]);
+ assert_eq!(it.next(), Some(2));
+ iter_equal(it.clone(), &[]);
+ assert_eq!(it.next(), None);
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* TODO: implement CoW interop?
+ #[test]
+ fn test_cow_from() {
+ let borrowed: &[_] = &["borrowed", "(slice)"];
+ let owned = thin_vec!["owned", "(vec)"];
+ match (Cow::from(owned.clone()), Cow::from(borrowed)) {
+ (Cow::Owned(o), Cow::Borrowed(b)) => assert!(o == owned && b == borrowed),
+ _ => panic!("invalid `Cow::from`"),
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_from_cow() {
+ let borrowed: &[_] = &["borrowed", "(slice)"];
+ let owned = thin_vec!["owned", "(vec)"];
+ assert_eq!(ThinVec::from(Cow::Borrowed(borrowed)), thin_vec!["borrowed", "(slice)"]);
+ assert_eq!(ThinVec::from(Cow::Owned(owned)), thin_vec!["owned", "(vec)"]);
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* TODO: make drain covariant
+ #[allow(dead_code)]
+ fn assert_covariance() {
+ fn drain<'new>(d: Drain<'static, &'static str>) -> Drain<'new, &'new str> {
+ d
+ }
+ fn into_iter<'new>(i: IntoIter<&'static str>) -> IntoIter<&'new str> {
+ i
+ }
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* TODO: specialize vec.into_iter().collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ #[test]
+ fn from_into_inner() {
+ let vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3];
+ let ptr = vec.as_ptr();
+ let vec = vec.into_iter().collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(vec, [1, 2, 3]);
+ assert_eq!(vec.as_ptr(), ptr);
+
+ let ptr = &vec[1] as *const _;
+ let mut it = vec.into_iter();
+ it.next().unwrap();
+ let vec = it.collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(vec, [2, 3]);
+ assert!(ptr != vec.as_ptr());
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* TODO: implement higher than 16 alignment
+ #[test]
+ fn overaligned_allocations() {
+ #[repr(align(256))]
+ struct Foo(usize);
+ let mut v = thin_vec![Foo(273)];
+ for i in 0..0x1000 {
+ v.reserve_exact(i);
+ assert!(v[0].0 == 273);
+ assert!(v.as_ptr() as usize & 0xff == 0);
+ v.shrink_to_fit();
+ assert!(v[0].0 == 273);
+ assert!(v.as_ptr() as usize & 0xff == 0);
+ }
+ }
+ */
+
+ /* TODO: implement drain_filter?
+ #[test]
+ fn drain_filter_empty() {
+ let mut vec: ThinVec<i32> = thin_vec![];
+
+ {
+ let mut iter = vec.drain_filter(|_| true);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ }
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn drain_filter_zst() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![(), (), (), (), ()];
+ let initial_len = vec.len();
+ let mut count = 0;
+ {
+ let mut iter = vec.drain_filter(|_| true);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(initial_len)));
+ while let Some(_) = iter.next() {
+ count += 1;
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(initial_len - count)));
+ }
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(count, initial_len);
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn drain_filter_false() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ let initial_len = vec.len();
+ let mut count = 0;
+ {
+ let mut iter = vec.drain_filter(|_| false);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(initial_len)));
+ for _ in iter.by_ref() {
+ count += 1;
+ }
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(count, 0);
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), initial_len);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn drain_filter_true() {
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ let initial_len = vec.len();
+ let mut count = 0;
+ {
+ let mut iter = vec.drain_filter(|_| true);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(initial_len)));
+ while let Some(_) = iter.next() {
+ count += 1;
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(initial_len - count)));
+ }
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ assert_eq!(iter.next(), None);
+ assert_eq!(iter.size_hint(), (0, Some(0)));
+ }
+
+ assert_eq!(count, initial_len);
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 0);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn drain_filter_complex() {
+
+ { // [+xxx++++++xxxxx++++x+x++]
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1,
+ 2, 4, 6,
+ 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17,
+ 18, 20, 22, 24, 26,
+ 27, 29, 31, 33,
+ 34,
+ 35,
+ 36,
+ 37, 39];
+
+ let removed = vec.drain_filter(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(removed.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(removed, thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 34, 36]);
+
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 14);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![1, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37, 39]);
+ }
+
+ { // [xxx++++++xxxxx++++x+x++]
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![2, 4, 6,
+ 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17,
+ 18, 20, 22, 24, 26,
+ 27, 29, 31, 33,
+ 34,
+ 35,
+ 36,
+ 37, 39];
+
+ let removed = vec.drain_filter(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(removed.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(removed, thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 34, 36]);
+
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 13);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37, 39]);
+ }
+
+ { // [xxx++++++xxxxx++++x+x]
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![2, 4, 6,
+ 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17,
+ 18, 20, 22, 24, 26,
+ 27, 29, 31, 33,
+ 34,
+ 35,
+ 36];
+
+ let removed = vec.drain_filter(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(removed.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(removed, thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 34, 36]);
+
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 11);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35]);
+ }
+
+ { // [xxxxxxxxxx+++++++++++]
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20,
+ 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19];
+
+ let removed = vec.drain_filter(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(removed.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(removed, thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20]);
+
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19]);
+ }
+
+ { // [+++++++++++xxxxxxxxxx]
+ let mut vec = thin_vec![1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19,
+ 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20];
+
+ let removed = vec.drain_filter(|x| *x % 2 == 0).collect::<ThinVec<_>>();
+ assert_eq!(removed.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(removed, thin_vec![2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20]);
+
+ assert_eq!(vec.len(), 10);
+ assert_eq!(vec, thin_vec![1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19]);
+ }
+ }
+ */
+ #[test]
+ fn test_reserve_exact() {
+ // This is all the same as test_reserve
+
+ let mut v = ThinVec::new();
+ assert_eq!(v.capacity(), 0);
+
+ v.reserve_exact(2);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 2);
+
+ for i in 0..16 {
+ v.push(i);
+ }
+
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 16);
+ v.reserve_exact(16);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 32);
+
+ v.push(16);
+
+ v.reserve_exact(16);
+ assert!(v.capacity() >= 33)
+ }
+
+ /* TODO: implement try_reserve
+ #[test]
+ fn test_try_reserve() {
+
+ // These are the interesting cases:
+ // * exactly isize::MAX should never trigger a CapacityOverflow (can be OOM)
+ // * > isize::MAX should always fail
+ // * On 16/32-bit should CapacityOverflow
+ // * On 64-bit should OOM
+ // * overflow may trigger when adding `len` to `cap` (in number of elements)
+ // * overflow may trigger when multiplying `new_cap` by size_of::<T> (to get bytes)
+
+ const MAX_CAP: usize = isize::MAX as usize;
+ const MAX_USIZE: usize = usize::MAX;
+
+ // On 16/32-bit, we check that allocations don't exceed isize::MAX,
+ // on 64-bit, we assume the OS will give an OOM for such a ridiculous size.
+ // Any platform that succeeds for these requests is technically broken with
+ // ptr::offset because LLVM is the worst.
+ let guards_against_isize = size_of::<usize>() < 8;
+
+ {
+ // Note: basic stuff is checked by test_reserve
+ let mut empty_bytes: ThinVec<u8> = ThinVec::new();
+
+ // Check isize::MAX doesn't count as an overflow
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ // Play it again, frank! (just to be sure)
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ // Check isize::MAX + 1 does count as overflow
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP + 1) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!") }
+
+ // Check usize::MAX does count as overflow
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!") }
+ } else {
+ // Check isize::MAX + 1 is an OOM
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP + 1) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+
+ // Check usize::MAX is an OOM
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = empty_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ }
+
+
+ {
+ // Same basic idea, but with non-zero len
+ let mut ten_bytes: ThinVec<u8> = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!"); }
+ } else {
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = ten_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_CAP - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ // Should always overflow in the add-to-len
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!") }
+ }
+
+
+ {
+ // Same basic idea, but with interesting type size
+ let mut ten_u32s: ThinVec<u32> = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve(MAX_CAP/4 - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve(MAX_CAP/4 - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve(MAX_CAP/4 - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!"); }
+ } else {
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = ten_u32s.try_reserve(MAX_CAP/4 - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ // Should fail in the mul-by-size
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve(MAX_USIZE - 20) {
+ } else {
+ panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ }
+
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_try_reserve_exact() {
+
+ // This is exactly the same as test_try_reserve with the method changed.
+ // See that test for comments.
+
+ const MAX_CAP: usize = isize::MAX as usize;
+ const MAX_USIZE: usize = usize::MAX;
+
+ let guards_against_isize = size_of::<usize>() < 8;
+
+ {
+ let mut empty_bytes: ThinVec<u8> = ThinVec::new();
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP + 1) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!") }
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!") }
+ } else {
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP + 1) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = empty_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ }
+
+
+ {
+ let mut ten_bytes: ThinVec<u8> = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!"); }
+ } else {
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = ten_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_bytes.try_reserve_exact(MAX_USIZE) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!") }
+ }
+
+
+ {
+ let mut ten_u32s: ThinVec<u32> = thin_vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];
+
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP/4 - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP/4 - 10) {
+ panic!("isize::MAX shouldn't trigger an overflow!");
+ }
+ if guards_against_isize {
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP/4 - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an overflow!"); }
+ } else {
+ if let Err(AllocErr) = ten_u32s.try_reserve_exact(MAX_CAP/4 - 9) {
+ } else { panic!("isize::MAX + 1 should trigger an OOM!") }
+ }
+ if let Err(CapacityOverflow) = ten_u32s.try_reserve_exact(MAX_USIZE - 20) {
+ } else { panic!("usize::MAX should trigger an overflow!") }
+ }
+ }
+ */
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg_attr(feature = "gecko-ffi", ignore)]
+ fn test_header_data() {
+ macro_rules! assert_aligned_head_ptr {
+ ($typename:ty) => {{
+ let v: ThinVec<$typename> = ThinVec::with_capacity(1 /* ensure allocation */);
+ let head_ptr: *mut $typename = v.data_raw();
+ assert_eq!(
+ head_ptr as usize % std::mem::align_of::<$typename>(),
+ 0,
+ "expected Header::data<{}> to be aligned",
+ stringify!($typename)
+ );
+ }};
+ }
+
+ const HEADER_SIZE: usize = std::mem::size_of::<Header>();
+ assert_eq!(2 * std::mem::size_of::<usize>(), HEADER_SIZE);
+
+ #[repr(C, align(128))]
+ struct Funky<T>(T);
+ assert_eq!(padding::<Funky<()>>(), 128 - HEADER_SIZE);
+ assert_aligned_head_ptr!(Funky<()>);
+
+ assert_eq!(padding::<Funky<u8>>(), 128 - HEADER_SIZE);
+ assert_aligned_head_ptr!(Funky<u8>);
+
+ assert_eq!(padding::<Funky<[(); 1024]>>(), 128 - HEADER_SIZE);
+ assert_aligned_head_ptr!(Funky<[(); 1024]>);
+
+ assert_eq!(padding::<Funky<[*mut usize; 1024]>>(), 128 - HEADER_SIZE);
+ assert_aligned_head_ptr!(Funky<[*mut usize; 1024]>);
+ }
+
+ #[cfg(feature = "serde")]
+ use serde_test::{assert_tokens, Token};
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "serde")]
+ fn test_ser_de_empty() {
+ let vec = ThinVec::<u32>::new();
+
+ assert_tokens(&vec, &[Token::Seq { len: Some(0) }, Token::SeqEnd]);
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[cfg(feature = "serde")]
+ fn test_ser_de() {
+ let mut vec = ThinVec::<u32>::new();
+ vec.push(20);
+ vec.push(55);
+ vec.push(123);
+
+ assert_tokens(
+ &vec,
+ &[
+ Token::Seq { len: Some(3) },
+ Token::U32(20),
+ Token::U32(55),
+ Token::U32(123),
+ Token::SeqEnd,
+ ],
+ );
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ fn test_set_len() {
+ let mut vec: ThinVec<u32> = thin_vec![];
+ unsafe {
+ vec.set_len(0); // at one point this caused a crash
+ }
+ }
+
+ #[test]
+ #[should_panic(expected = "invalid set_len(1) on empty ThinVec")]
+ fn test_set_len_invalid() {
+ let mut vec: ThinVec<u32> = thin_vec![];
+ unsafe {
+ vec.set_len(1);
+ }
+ }
+}