From 698f8c2f01ea549d77d7dc3338a12e04c11057b9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:02:58 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.64.0+dfsg1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_impl.rs | 1071 +++++++++++++++++++++++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_mut.rs | 1079 +++++++++++++++++++++++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/chain.rs | 222 +++++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/iter.rs | 132 +++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/limit.rs | 75 ++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/mod.rs | 41 + vendor/bytes/src/buf/reader.rs | 81 ++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/take.rs | 147 ++++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/uninit_slice.rs | 176 ++++ vendor/bytes/src/buf/vec_deque.rs | 22 + vendor/bytes/src/buf/writer.rs | 88 ++ vendor/bytes/src/bytes.rs | 1138 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ vendor/bytes/src/bytes_mut.rs | 1581 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ vendor/bytes/src/fmt/debug.rs | 49 ++ vendor/bytes/src/fmt/hex.rs | 37 + vendor/bytes/src/fmt/mod.rs | 5 + vendor/bytes/src/lib.rs | 117 +++ vendor/bytes/src/loom.rs | 30 + vendor/bytes/src/serde.rs | 89 ++ 19 files changed, 6180 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_impl.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_mut.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/chain.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/iter.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/limit.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/mod.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/reader.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/take.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/uninit_slice.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/vec_deque.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/buf/writer.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/bytes.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/bytes_mut.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/fmt/debug.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/fmt/hex.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/fmt/mod.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/lib.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/loom.rs create mode 100644 vendor/bytes/src/serde.rs (limited to 'vendor/bytes/src') diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_impl.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_impl.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..16ad8a7ee --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_impl.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1071 @@ +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +use crate::buf::{reader, Reader}; +use crate::buf::{take, Chain, Take}; + +use core::{cmp, mem, ptr}; + +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +use std::io::IoSlice; + +use alloc::boxed::Box; + +macro_rules! buf_get_impl { + ($this:ident, $typ:tt::$conv:tt) => {{ + const SIZE: usize = mem::size_of::<$typ>(); + // try to convert directly from the bytes + // this Option trick is to avoid keeping a borrow on self + // when advance() is called (mut borrow) and to call bytes() only once + let ret = $this + .chunk() + .get(..SIZE) + .map(|src| unsafe { $typ::$conv(*(src as *const _ as *const [_; SIZE])) }); + + if let Some(ret) = ret { + // if the direct conversion was possible, advance and return + $this.advance(SIZE); + return ret; + } else { + // if not we copy the bytes in a temp buffer then convert + let mut buf = [0; SIZE]; + $this.copy_to_slice(&mut buf); // (do the advance) + return $typ::$conv(buf); + } + }}; + (le => $this:ident, $typ:tt, $len_to_read:expr) => {{ + debug_assert!(mem::size_of::<$typ>() >= $len_to_read); + + // The same trick as above does not improve the best case speed. + // It seems to be linked to the way the method is optimised by the compiler + let mut buf = [0; (mem::size_of::<$typ>())]; + $this.copy_to_slice(&mut buf[..($len_to_read)]); + return $typ::from_le_bytes(buf); + }}; + (be => $this:ident, $typ:tt, $len_to_read:expr) => {{ + debug_assert!(mem::size_of::<$typ>() >= $len_to_read); + + let mut buf = [0; (mem::size_of::<$typ>())]; + $this.copy_to_slice(&mut buf[mem::size_of::<$typ>() - ($len_to_read)..]); + return $typ::from_be_bytes(buf); + }}; +} + +/// Read bytes from a buffer. +/// +/// A buffer stores bytes in memory such that read operations are infallible. +/// The underlying storage may or may not be in contiguous memory. A `Buf` value +/// is a cursor into the buffer. Reading from `Buf` advances the cursor +/// position. It can be thought of as an efficient `Iterator` for collections of +/// bytes. +/// +/// The simplest `Buf` is a `&[u8]`. +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::Buf; +/// +/// let mut buf = &b"hello world"[..]; +/// +/// assert_eq!(b'h', buf.get_u8()); +/// assert_eq!(b'e', buf.get_u8()); +/// assert_eq!(b'l', buf.get_u8()); +/// +/// let mut rest = [0; 8]; +/// buf.copy_to_slice(&mut rest); +/// +/// assert_eq!(&rest[..], &b"lo world"[..]); +/// ``` +pub trait Buf { + /// Returns the number of bytes between the current position and the end of + /// the buffer. + /// + /// This value is greater than or equal to the length of the slice returned + /// by `chunk()`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"hello world"[..]; + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.remaining(), 11); + /// + /// buf.get_u8(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.remaining(), 10); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// Implementations of `remaining` should ensure that the return value does + /// not change unless a call is made to `advance` or any other function that + /// is documented to change the `Buf`'s current position. + fn remaining(&self) -> usize; + + /// Returns a slice starting at the current position and of length between 0 + /// and `Buf::remaining()`. Note that this *can* return shorter slice (this allows + /// non-continuous internal representation). + /// + /// This is a lower level function. Most operations are done with other + /// functions. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"hello world"[..]; + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.chunk(), &b"hello world"[..]); + /// + /// buf.advance(6); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.chunk(), &b"world"[..]); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// This function should never panic. Once the end of the buffer is reached, + /// i.e., `Buf::remaining` returns 0, calls to `chunk()` should return an + /// empty slice. + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8]; + + /// Fills `dst` with potentially multiple slices starting at `self`'s + /// current position. + /// + /// If the `Buf` is backed by disjoint slices of bytes, `chunk_vectored` enables + /// fetching more than one slice at once. `dst` is a slice of `IoSlice` + /// references, enabling the slice to be directly used with [`writev`] + /// without any further conversion. The sum of the lengths of all the + /// buffers in `dst` will be less than or equal to `Buf::remaining()`. + /// + /// The entries in `dst` will be overwritten, but the data **contained** by + /// the slices **will not** be modified. If `chunk_vectored` does not fill every + /// entry in `dst`, then `dst` is guaranteed to contain all remaining slices + /// in `self. + /// + /// This is a lower level function. Most operations are done with other + /// functions. + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// This function should never panic. Once the end of the buffer is reached, + /// i.e., `Buf::remaining` returns 0, calls to `chunk_vectored` must return 0 + /// without mutating `dst`. + /// + /// Implementations should also take care to properly handle being called + /// with `dst` being a zero length slice. + /// + /// [`writev`]: http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/readv.2.html + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + fn chunks_vectored<'a>(&'a self, dst: &mut [IoSlice<'a>]) -> usize { + if dst.is_empty() { + return 0; + } + + if self.has_remaining() { + dst[0] = IoSlice::new(self.chunk()); + 1 + } else { + 0 + } + } + + /// Advance the internal cursor of the Buf + /// + /// The next call to `chunk()` will return a slice starting `cnt` bytes + /// further into the underlying buffer. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"hello world"[..]; + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.chunk(), &b"hello world"[..]); + /// + /// buf.advance(6); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.chunk(), &b"world"[..]); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function **may** panic if `cnt > self.remaining()`. + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// It is recommended for implementations of `advance` to panic if `cnt > + /// self.remaining()`. If the implementation does not panic, the call must + /// behave as if `cnt == self.remaining()`. + /// + /// A call with `cnt == 0` should never panic and be a no-op. + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize); + + /// Returns true if there are any more bytes to consume + /// + /// This is equivalent to `self.remaining() != 0`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"a"[..]; + /// + /// assert!(buf.has_remaining()); + /// + /// buf.get_u8(); + /// + /// assert!(!buf.has_remaining()); + /// ``` + fn has_remaining(&self) -> bool { + self.remaining() > 0 + } + + /// Copies bytes from `self` into `dst`. + /// + /// The cursor is advanced by the number of bytes copied. `self` must have + /// enough remaining bytes to fill `dst`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"hello world"[..]; + /// let mut dst = [0; 5]; + /// + /// buf.copy_to_slice(&mut dst); + /// assert_eq!(&b"hello"[..], &dst); + /// assert_eq!(6, buf.remaining()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if `self.remaining() < dst.len()` + fn copy_to_slice(&mut self, dst: &mut [u8]) { + let mut off = 0; + + assert!(self.remaining() >= dst.len()); + + while off < dst.len() { + let cnt; + + unsafe { + let src = self.chunk(); + cnt = cmp::min(src.len(), dst.len() - off); + + ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src.as_ptr(), dst[off..].as_mut_ptr(), cnt); + + off += cnt; + } + + self.advance(cnt); + } + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 8 bit integer from `self`. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 1. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(8, buf.get_u8()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is no more remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u8(&mut self) -> u8 { + assert!(self.remaining() >= 1); + let ret = self.chunk()[0]; + self.advance(1); + ret + } + + /// Gets a signed 8 bit integer from `self`. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 1. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(8, buf.get_i8()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is no more remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i8(&mut self) -> i8 { + assert!(self.remaining() >= 1); + let ret = self.chunk()[0] as i8; + self.advance(1); + ret + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 16 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x09 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809, buf.get_u16()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u16(&mut self) -> u16 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u16::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 16 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x09\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809, buf.get_u16_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u16_le(&mut self) -> u16 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u16::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 16 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x09 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809, buf.get_i16()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i16(&mut self) -> i16 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i16::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 16 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x09\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809, buf.get_i16_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i16_le(&mut self) -> i16 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i16::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 32 bit integer from `self` in the big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x09\xA0\xA1 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809A0A1, buf.get_u32()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u32(&mut self) -> u32 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u32::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 32 bit integer from `self` in the little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\xA1\xA0\x09\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809A0A1, buf.get_u32_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u32_le(&mut self) -> u32 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u32::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 32 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x09\xA0\xA1 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809A0A1, buf.get_i32()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i32(&mut self) -> i32 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i32::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 32 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\xA1\xA0\x09\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0809A0A1, buf.get_i32_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i32_le(&mut self) -> i32 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i32::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 64 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0102030405060708, buf.get_u64()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u64(&mut self) -> u64 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u64::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 64 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0102030405060708, buf.get_u64_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u64_le(&mut self) -> u64 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u64::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 64 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0102030405060708, buf.get_i64()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i64(&mut self) -> i64 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i64::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 64 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x0102030405060708, buf.get_i64_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i64_le(&mut self) -> i64 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i64::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 128 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x10\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x01020304050607080910111213141516, buf.get_u128()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u128(&mut self) -> u128 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u128::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned 128 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x16\x15\x14\x13\x12\x11\x10\x09\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x01020304050607080910111213141516, buf.get_u128_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_u128_le(&mut self) -> u128 { + buf_get_impl!(self, u128::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 128 bit integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x10\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x01020304050607080910111213141516, buf.get_i128()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i128(&mut self) -> i128 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i128::from_be_bytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed 128 bit integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x16\x15\x14\x13\x12\x11\x10\x09\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x01020304050607080910111213141516, buf.get_i128_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_i128_le(&mut self) -> i128 { + buf_get_impl!(self, i128::from_le_bytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned n-byte integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x010203, buf.get_uint(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_uint(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> u64 { + buf_get_impl!(be => self, u64, nbytes); + } + + /// Gets an unsigned n-byte integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x010203, buf.get_uint_le(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_uint_le(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> u64 { + buf_get_impl!(le => self, u64, nbytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed n-byte integer from `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x01\x02\x03 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x010203, buf.get_int(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_int(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> i64 { + buf_get_impl!(be => self, i64, nbytes); + } + + /// Gets a signed n-byte integer from `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x03\x02\x01 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(0x010203, buf.get_int_le(3)); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_int_le(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> i64 { + buf_get_impl!(le => self, i64, nbytes); + } + + /// Gets an IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number from + /// `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x3F\x99\x99\x9A hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(1.2f32, buf.get_f32()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_f32(&mut self) -> f32 { + f32::from_bits(Self::get_u32(self)) + } + + /// Gets an IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number from + /// `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x9A\x99\x99\x3F hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(1.2f32, buf.get_f32_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_f32_le(&mut self) -> f32 { + f32::from_bits(Self::get_u32_le(self)) + } + + /// Gets an IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number from + /// `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x3F\xF3\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33 hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(1.2f64, buf.get_f64()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_f64(&mut self) -> f64 { + f64::from_bits(Self::get_u64(self)) + } + + /// Gets an IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number from + /// `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = &b"\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\xF3\x3F hello"[..]; + /// assert_eq!(1.2f64, buf.get_f64_le()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining data in `self`. + fn get_f64_le(&mut self) -> f64 { + f64::from_bits(Self::get_u64_le(self)) + } + + /// Consumes `len` bytes inside self and returns new instance of `Bytes` + /// with this data. + /// + /// This function may be optimized by the underlying type to avoid actual + /// copies. For example, `Bytes` implementation will do a shallow copy + /// (ref-count increment). + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let bytes = (&b"hello world"[..]).copy_to_bytes(5); + /// assert_eq!(&bytes[..], &b"hello"[..]); + /// ``` + fn copy_to_bytes(&mut self, len: usize) -> crate::Bytes { + use super::BufMut; + + assert!(len <= self.remaining(), "`len` greater than remaining"); + + let mut ret = crate::BytesMut::with_capacity(len); + ret.put(self.take(len)); + ret.freeze() + } + + /// Creates an adaptor which will read at most `limit` bytes from `self`. + /// + /// This function returns a new instance of `Buf` which will read at most + /// `limit` bytes. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{Buf, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world"[..].take(5); + /// let mut dst = vec![]; + /// + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(dst, b"hello"); + /// + /// let mut buf = buf.into_inner(); + /// dst.clear(); + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(dst, b" world"); + /// ``` + fn take(self, limit: usize) -> Take + where + Self: Sized, + { + take::new(self, limit) + } + + /// Creates an adaptor which will chain this buffer with another. + /// + /// The returned `Buf` instance will first consume all bytes from `self`. + /// Afterwards the output is equivalent to the output of next. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut chain = b"hello "[..].chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// let full = chain.copy_to_bytes(11); + /// assert_eq!(full.chunk(), b"hello world"); + /// ``` + fn chain(self, next: U) -> Chain + where + Self: Sized, + { + Chain::new(self, next) + } + + /// Creates an adaptor which implements the `Read` trait for `self`. + /// + /// This function returns a new value which implements `Read` by adapting + /// the `Read` trait functions to the `Buf` trait functions. Given that + /// `Buf` operations are infallible, none of the `Read` functions will + /// return with `Err`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{Bytes, Buf}; + /// use std::io::Read; + /// + /// let buf = Bytes::from("hello world"); + /// + /// let mut reader = buf.reader(); + /// let mut dst = [0; 1024]; + /// + /// let num = reader.read(&mut dst).unwrap(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(11, num); + /// assert_eq!(&dst[..11], &b"hello world"[..]); + /// ``` + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + fn reader(self) -> Reader + where + Self: Sized, + { + reader::new(self) + } +} + +macro_rules! deref_forward_buf { + () => { + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + (**self).remaining() + } + + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + (**self).chunk() + } + + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + fn chunks_vectored<'b>(&'b self, dst: &mut [IoSlice<'b>]) -> usize { + (**self).chunks_vectored(dst) + } + + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + (**self).advance(cnt) + } + + fn has_remaining(&self) -> bool { + (**self).has_remaining() + } + + fn copy_to_slice(&mut self, dst: &mut [u8]) { + (**self).copy_to_slice(dst) + } + + fn get_u8(&mut self) -> u8 { + (**self).get_u8() + } + + fn get_i8(&mut self) -> i8 { + (**self).get_i8() + } + + fn get_u16(&mut self) -> u16 { + (**self).get_u16() + } + + fn get_u16_le(&mut self) -> u16 { + (**self).get_u16_le() + } + + fn get_i16(&mut self) -> i16 { + (**self).get_i16() + } + + fn get_i16_le(&mut self) -> i16 { + (**self).get_i16_le() + } + + fn get_u32(&mut self) -> u32 { + (**self).get_u32() + } + + fn get_u32_le(&mut self) -> u32 { + (**self).get_u32_le() + } + + fn get_i32(&mut self) -> i32 { + (**self).get_i32() + } + + fn get_i32_le(&mut self) -> i32 { + (**self).get_i32_le() + } + + fn get_u64(&mut self) -> u64 { + (**self).get_u64() + } + + fn get_u64_le(&mut self) -> u64 { + (**self).get_u64_le() + } + + fn get_i64(&mut self) -> i64 { + (**self).get_i64() + } + + fn get_i64_le(&mut self) -> i64 { + (**self).get_i64_le() + } + + fn get_uint(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> u64 { + (**self).get_uint(nbytes) + } + + fn get_uint_le(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> u64 { + (**self).get_uint_le(nbytes) + } + + fn get_int(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> i64 { + (**self).get_int(nbytes) + } + + fn get_int_le(&mut self, nbytes: usize) -> i64 { + (**self).get_int_le(nbytes) + } + + fn copy_to_bytes(&mut self, len: usize) -> crate::Bytes { + (**self).copy_to_bytes(len) + } + }; +} + +impl Buf for &mut T { + deref_forward_buf!(); +} + +impl Buf for Box { + deref_forward_buf!(); +} + +impl Buf for &[u8] { + #[inline] + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + self.len() + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + self + } + + #[inline] + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + *self = &self[cnt..]; + } +} + +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +impl> Buf for std::io::Cursor { + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + let len = self.get_ref().as_ref().len(); + let pos = self.position(); + + if pos >= len as u64 { + return 0; + } + + len - pos as usize + } + + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + let len = self.get_ref().as_ref().len(); + let pos = self.position(); + + if pos >= len as u64 { + return &[]; + } + + &self.get_ref().as_ref()[pos as usize..] + } + + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + let pos = (self.position() as usize) + .checked_add(cnt) + .expect("overflow"); + + assert!(pos <= self.get_ref().as_ref().len()); + self.set_position(pos as u64); + } +} + +// The existence of this function makes the compiler catch if the Buf +// trait is "object-safe" or not. +fn _assert_trait_object(_b: &dyn Buf) {} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_mut.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_mut.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f736727b4 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/buf_mut.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1079 @@ +use crate::buf::{limit, Chain, Limit, UninitSlice}; +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +use crate::buf::{writer, Writer}; + +use core::{cmp, mem, ptr, usize}; + +use alloc::{boxed::Box, vec::Vec}; + +/// A trait for values that provide sequential write access to bytes. +/// +/// Write bytes to a buffer +/// +/// A buffer stores bytes in memory such that write operations are infallible. +/// The underlying storage may or may not be in contiguous memory. A `BufMut` +/// value is a cursor into the buffer. Writing to `BufMut` advances the cursor +/// position. +/// +/// The simplest `BufMut` is a `Vec`. +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::BufMut; +/// +/// let mut buf = vec![]; +/// +/// buf.put(&b"hello world"[..]); +/// +/// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello world"); +/// ``` +pub unsafe trait BufMut { + /// Returns the number of bytes that can be written from the current + /// position until the end of the buffer is reached. + /// + /// This value is greater than or equal to the length of the slice returned + /// by `chunk_mut()`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut dst = [0; 10]; + /// let mut buf = &mut dst[..]; + /// + /// let original_remaining = buf.remaining_mut(); + /// buf.put(&b"hello"[..]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(original_remaining - 5, buf.remaining_mut()); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// Implementations of `remaining_mut` should ensure that the return value + /// does not change unless a call is made to `advance_mut` or any other + /// function that is documented to change the `BufMut`'s current position. + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize; + + /// Advance the internal cursor of the BufMut + /// + /// The next call to `chunk_mut` will return a slice starting `cnt` bytes + /// further into the underlying buffer. + /// + /// This function is unsafe because there is no guarantee that the bytes + /// being advanced past have been initialized. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = Vec::with_capacity(16); + /// + /// // Write some data + /// buf.chunk_mut()[0..2].copy_from_slice(b"he"); + /// unsafe { buf.advance_mut(2) }; + /// + /// // write more bytes + /// buf.chunk_mut()[0..3].copy_from_slice(b"llo"); + /// + /// unsafe { buf.advance_mut(3); } + /// + /// assert_eq!(5, buf.len()); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function **may** panic if `cnt > self.remaining_mut()`. + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// It is recommended for implementations of `advance_mut` to panic if + /// `cnt > self.remaining_mut()`. If the implementation does not panic, + /// the call must behave as if `cnt == self.remaining_mut()`. + /// + /// A call with `cnt == 0` should never panic and be a no-op. + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize); + + /// Returns true if there is space in `self` for more bytes. + /// + /// This is equivalent to `self.remaining_mut() != 0`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut dst = [0; 5]; + /// let mut buf = &mut dst[..]; + /// + /// assert!(buf.has_remaining_mut()); + /// + /// buf.put(&b"hello"[..]); + /// + /// assert!(!buf.has_remaining_mut()); + /// ``` + fn has_remaining_mut(&self) -> bool { + self.remaining_mut() > 0 + } + + /// Returns a mutable slice starting at the current BufMut position and of + /// length between 0 and `BufMut::remaining_mut()`. Note that this *can* be shorter than the + /// whole remainder of the buffer (this allows non-continuous implementation). + /// + /// This is a lower level function. Most operations are done with other + /// functions. + /// + /// The returned byte slice may represent uninitialized memory. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = Vec::with_capacity(16); + /// + /// unsafe { + /// // MaybeUninit::as_mut_ptr + /// buf.chunk_mut()[0..].as_mut_ptr().write(b'h'); + /// buf.chunk_mut()[1..].as_mut_ptr().write(b'e'); + /// + /// buf.advance_mut(2); + /// + /// buf.chunk_mut()[0..].as_mut_ptr().write(b'l'); + /// buf.chunk_mut()[1..].as_mut_ptr().write(b'l'); + /// buf.chunk_mut()[2..].as_mut_ptr().write(b'o'); + /// + /// buf.advance_mut(3); + /// } + /// + /// assert_eq!(5, buf.len()); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Implementer notes + /// + /// This function should never panic. `chunk_mut` should return an empty + /// slice **if and only if** `remaining_mut()` returns 0. In other words, + /// `chunk_mut()` returning an empty slice implies that `remaining_mut()` will + /// return 0 and `remaining_mut()` returning 0 implies that `chunk_mut()` will + /// return an empty slice. + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice; + + /// Transfer bytes into `self` from `src` and advance the cursor by the + /// number of bytes written. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// + /// buf.put_u8(b'h'); + /// buf.put(&b"ello"[..]); + /// buf.put(&b" world"[..]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello world"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if `self` does not have enough capacity to contain `src`. + fn put(&mut self, mut src: T) + where + Self: Sized, + { + assert!(self.remaining_mut() >= src.remaining()); + + while src.has_remaining() { + let l; + + unsafe { + let s = src.chunk(); + let d = self.chunk_mut(); + l = cmp::min(s.len(), d.len()); + + ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(s.as_ptr(), d.as_mut_ptr() as *mut u8, l); + } + + src.advance(l); + unsafe { + self.advance_mut(l); + } + } + } + + /// Transfer bytes into `self` from `src` and advance the cursor by the + /// number of bytes written. + /// + /// `self` must have enough remaining capacity to contain all of `src`. + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut dst = [0; 6]; + /// + /// { + /// let mut buf = &mut dst[..]; + /// buf.put_slice(b"hello"); + /// + /// assert_eq!(1, buf.remaining_mut()); + /// } + /// + /// assert_eq!(b"hello\0", &dst); + /// ``` + fn put_slice(&mut self, src: &[u8]) { + let mut off = 0; + + assert!( + self.remaining_mut() >= src.len(), + "buffer overflow; remaining = {}; src = {}", + self.remaining_mut(), + src.len() + ); + + while off < src.len() { + let cnt; + + unsafe { + let dst = self.chunk_mut(); + cnt = cmp::min(dst.len(), src.len() - off); + + ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src[off..].as_ptr(), dst.as_mut_ptr() as *mut u8, cnt); + + off += cnt; + } + + unsafe { + self.advance_mut(cnt); + } + } + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 8 bit integer to `self`. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 1. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u8(0x01); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u8(&mut self, n: u8) { + let src = [n]; + self.put_slice(&src); + } + + /// Writes a signed 8 bit integer to `self`. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 1. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i8(0x01); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i8(&mut self, n: i8) { + let src = [n as u8]; + self.put_slice(&src) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 16 bit integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u16(0x0809); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x09"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u16(&mut self, n: u16) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 16 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u16_le(0x0809); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x09\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u16_le(&mut self, n: u16) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 16 bit integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i16(0x0809); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x09"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i16(&mut self, n: i16) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 16 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 2. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i16_le(0x0809); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x09\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i16_le(&mut self, n: i16) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 32 bit integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u32(0x0809A0A1); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x09\xA0\xA1"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u32(&mut self, n: u32) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 32 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u32_le(0x0809A0A1); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\xA1\xA0\x09\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u32_le(&mut self, n: u32) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 32 bit integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i32(0x0809A0A1); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x09\xA0\xA1"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i32(&mut self, n: i32) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 32 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i32_le(0x0809A0A1); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\xA1\xA0\x09\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i32_le(&mut self, n: i32) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 64 bit integer to `self` in the big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u64(0x0102030405060708); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u64(&mut self, n: u64) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 64 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u64_le(0x0102030405060708); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u64_le(&mut self, n: u64) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 64 bit integer to `self` in the big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i64(0x0102030405060708); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i64(&mut self, n: i64) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 64 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i64_le(0x0102030405060708); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i64_le(&mut self, n: i64) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 128 bit integer to `self` in the big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u128(0x01020304050607080910111213141516); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x10\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u128(&mut self, n: u128) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned 128 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_u128_le(0x01020304050607080910111213141516); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x16\x15\x14\x13\x12\x11\x10\x09\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_u128_le(&mut self, n: u128) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 128 bit integer to `self` in the big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i128(0x01020304050607080910111213141516); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x10\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i128(&mut self, n: i128) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes a signed 128 bit integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 16. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_i128_le(0x01020304050607080910111213141516); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x16\x15\x14\x13\x12\x11\x10\x09\x08\x07\x06\x05\x04\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_i128_le(&mut self, n: i128) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()) + } + + /// Writes an unsigned n-byte integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_uint(0x010203, 3); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_uint(&mut self, n: u64, nbytes: usize) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()[mem::size_of_val(&n) - nbytes..]); + } + + /// Writes an unsigned n-byte integer to `self` in the little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_uint_le(0x010203, 3); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_uint_le(&mut self, n: u64, nbytes: usize) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()[0..nbytes]); + } + + /// Writes a signed n-byte integer to `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_int(0x010203, 3); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x01\x02\x03"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_int(&mut self, n: i64, nbytes: usize) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_be_bytes()[mem::size_of_val(&n) - nbytes..]); + } + + /// Writes a signed n-byte integer to `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by `nbytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_int_le(0x010203, 3); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x03\x02\x01"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_int_le(&mut self, n: i64, nbytes: usize) { + self.put_slice(&n.to_le_bytes()[0..nbytes]); + } + + /// Writes an IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number to + /// `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_f32(1.2f32); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x3F\x99\x99\x9A"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_f32(&mut self, n: f32) { + self.put_u32(n.to_bits()); + } + + /// Writes an IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number to + /// `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 4. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_f32_le(1.2f32); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x9A\x99\x99\x3F"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_f32_le(&mut self, n: f32) { + self.put_u32_le(n.to_bits()); + } + + /// Writes an IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number to + /// `self` in big-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_f64(1.2f64); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x3F\xF3\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_f64(&mut self, n: f64) { + self.put_u64(n.to_bits()); + } + + /// Writes an IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number to + /// `self` in little-endian byte order. + /// + /// The current position is advanced by 8. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![]; + /// buf.put_f64_le(1.2f64); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\x33\xF3\x3F"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// This function panics if there is not enough remaining capacity in + /// `self`. + fn put_f64_le(&mut self, n: f64) { + self.put_u64_le(n.to_bits()); + } + + /// Creates an adaptor which can write at most `limit` bytes to `self`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let arr = &mut [0u8; 128][..]; + /// assert_eq!(arr.remaining_mut(), 128); + /// + /// let dst = arr.limit(10); + /// assert_eq!(dst.remaining_mut(), 10); + /// ``` + fn limit(self, limit: usize) -> Limit + where + Self: Sized, + { + limit::new(self, limit) + } + + /// Creates an adaptor which implements the `Write` trait for `self`. + /// + /// This function returns a new value which implements `Write` by adapting + /// the `Write` trait functions to the `BufMut` trait functions. Given that + /// `BufMut` operations are infallible, none of the `Write` functions will + /// return with `Err`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// use std::io::Write; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![].writer(); + /// + /// let num = buf.write(&b"hello world"[..]).unwrap(); + /// assert_eq!(11, num); + /// + /// let buf = buf.into_inner(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(*buf, b"hello world"[..]); + /// ``` + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + fn writer(self) -> Writer + where + Self: Sized, + { + writer::new(self) + } + + /// Creates an adapter which will chain this buffer with another. + /// + /// The returned `BufMut` instance will first write to all bytes from + /// `self`. Afterwards, it will write to `next`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut a = [0u8; 5]; + /// let mut b = [0u8; 6]; + /// + /// let mut chain = (&mut a[..]).chain_mut(&mut b[..]); + /// + /// chain.put_slice(b"hello world"); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&a[..], b"hello"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b" world"); + /// ``` + fn chain_mut(self, next: U) -> Chain + where + Self: Sized, + { + Chain::new(self, next) + } +} + +macro_rules! deref_forward_bufmut { + () => { + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + (**self).remaining_mut() + } + + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + (**self).chunk_mut() + } + + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + (**self).advance_mut(cnt) + } + + fn put_slice(&mut self, src: &[u8]) { + (**self).put_slice(src) + } + + fn put_u8(&mut self, n: u8) { + (**self).put_u8(n) + } + + fn put_i8(&mut self, n: i8) { + (**self).put_i8(n) + } + + fn put_u16(&mut self, n: u16) { + (**self).put_u16(n) + } + + fn put_u16_le(&mut self, n: u16) { + (**self).put_u16_le(n) + } + + fn put_i16(&mut self, n: i16) { + (**self).put_i16(n) + } + + fn put_i16_le(&mut self, n: i16) { + (**self).put_i16_le(n) + } + + fn put_u32(&mut self, n: u32) { + (**self).put_u32(n) + } + + fn put_u32_le(&mut self, n: u32) { + (**self).put_u32_le(n) + } + + fn put_i32(&mut self, n: i32) { + (**self).put_i32(n) + } + + fn put_i32_le(&mut self, n: i32) { + (**self).put_i32_le(n) + } + + fn put_u64(&mut self, n: u64) { + (**self).put_u64(n) + } + + fn put_u64_le(&mut self, n: u64) { + (**self).put_u64_le(n) + } + + fn put_i64(&mut self, n: i64) { + (**self).put_i64(n) + } + + fn put_i64_le(&mut self, n: i64) { + (**self).put_i64_le(n) + } + }; +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for &mut T { + deref_forward_bufmut!(); +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for Box { + deref_forward_bufmut!(); +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for &mut [u8] { + #[inline] + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + self.len() + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + // UninitSlice is repr(transparent), so safe to transmute + unsafe { &mut *(*self as *mut [u8] as *mut _) } + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + // Lifetime dance taken from `impl Write for &mut [u8]`. + let (_, b) = core::mem::replace(self, &mut []).split_at_mut(cnt); + *self = b; + } +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for Vec { + #[inline] + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + usize::MAX - self.len() + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + let len = self.len(); + let remaining = self.capacity() - len; + + assert!( + cnt <= remaining, + "cannot advance past `remaining_mut`: {:?} <= {:?}", + cnt, + remaining + ); + + self.set_len(len + cnt); + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + if self.capacity() == self.len() { + self.reserve(64); // Grow the vec + } + + let cap = self.capacity(); + let len = self.len(); + + let ptr = self.as_mut_ptr(); + unsafe { &mut UninitSlice::from_raw_parts_mut(ptr, cap)[len..] } + } + + // Specialize these methods so they can skip checking `remaining_mut` + // and `advance_mut`. + fn put(&mut self, mut src: T) + where + Self: Sized, + { + // In case the src isn't contiguous, reserve upfront + self.reserve(src.remaining()); + + while src.has_remaining() { + let l; + + // a block to contain the src.bytes() borrow + { + let s = src.chunk(); + l = s.len(); + self.extend_from_slice(s); + } + + src.advance(l); + } + } + + #[inline] + fn put_slice(&mut self, src: &[u8]) { + self.extend_from_slice(src); + } +} + +// The existence of this function makes the compiler catch if the BufMut +// trait is "object-safe" or not. +fn _assert_trait_object(_b: &dyn BufMut) {} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/chain.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/chain.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d68bc2d0e --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/chain.rs @@ -0,0 +1,222 @@ +use crate::buf::{IntoIter, UninitSlice}; +use crate::{Buf, BufMut}; + +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +use std::io::IoSlice; + +/// A `Chain` sequences two buffers. +/// +/// `Chain` is an adapter that links two underlying buffers and provides a +/// continuous view across both buffers. It is able to sequence either immutable +/// buffers ([`Buf`] values) or mutable buffers ([`BufMut`] values). +/// +/// This struct is generally created by calling [`Buf::chain`]. Please see that +/// function's documentation for more detail. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::{Bytes, Buf}; +/// +/// let mut buf = (&b"hello "[..]) +/// .chain(&b"world"[..]); +/// +/// let full: Bytes = buf.copy_to_bytes(11); +/// assert_eq!(full[..], b"hello world"[..]); +/// ``` +/// +/// [`Buf::chain`]: trait.Buf.html#method.chain +/// [`Buf`]: trait.Buf.html +/// [`BufMut`]: trait.BufMut.html +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct Chain { + a: T, + b: U, +} + +impl Chain { + /// Creates a new `Chain` sequencing the provided values. + pub(crate) fn new(a: T, b: U) -> Chain { + Chain { a, b } + } + + /// Gets a reference to the first underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let buf = (&b"hello"[..]) + /// .chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.first_ref()[..], b"hello"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn first_ref(&self) -> &T { + &self.a + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the first underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = (&b"hello"[..]) + /// .chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// buf.first_mut().advance(1); + /// + /// let full = buf.copy_to_bytes(9); + /// assert_eq!(full, b"elloworld"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn first_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { + &mut self.a + } + + /// Gets a reference to the last underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let buf = (&b"hello"[..]) + /// .chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.last_ref()[..], b"world"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn last_ref(&self) -> &U { + &self.b + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the last underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = (&b"hello "[..]) + /// .chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// buf.last_mut().advance(1); + /// + /// let full = buf.copy_to_bytes(10); + /// assert_eq!(full, b"hello orld"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn last_mut(&mut self) -> &mut U { + &mut self.b + } + + /// Consumes this `Chain`, returning the underlying values. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let chain = (&b"hello"[..]) + /// .chain(&b"world"[..]); + /// + /// let (first, last) = chain.into_inner(); + /// assert_eq!(first[..], b"hello"[..]); + /// assert_eq!(last[..], b"world"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn into_inner(self) -> (T, U) { + (self.a, self.b) + } +} + +impl Buf for Chain +where + T: Buf, + U: Buf, +{ + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + self.a.remaining() + self.b.remaining() + } + + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + if self.a.has_remaining() { + self.a.chunk() + } else { + self.b.chunk() + } + } + + fn advance(&mut self, mut cnt: usize) { + let a_rem = self.a.remaining(); + + if a_rem != 0 { + if a_rem >= cnt { + self.a.advance(cnt); + return; + } + + // Consume what is left of a + self.a.advance(a_rem); + + cnt -= a_rem; + } + + self.b.advance(cnt); + } + + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + fn chunks_vectored<'a>(&'a self, dst: &mut [IoSlice<'a>]) -> usize { + let mut n = self.a.chunks_vectored(dst); + n += self.b.chunks_vectored(&mut dst[n..]); + n + } +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for Chain +where + T: BufMut, + U: BufMut, +{ + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + self.a.remaining_mut() + self.b.remaining_mut() + } + + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + if self.a.has_remaining_mut() { + self.a.chunk_mut() + } else { + self.b.chunk_mut() + } + } + + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, mut cnt: usize) { + let a_rem = self.a.remaining_mut(); + + if a_rem != 0 { + if a_rem >= cnt { + self.a.advance_mut(cnt); + return; + } + + // Consume what is left of a + self.a.advance_mut(a_rem); + + cnt -= a_rem; + } + + self.b.advance_mut(cnt); + } +} + +impl IntoIterator for Chain +where + T: Buf, + U: Buf, +{ + type Item = u8; + type IntoIter = IntoIter>; + + fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { + IntoIter::new(self) + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/iter.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/iter.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8914a40e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/iter.rs @@ -0,0 +1,132 @@ +use crate::Buf; + +/// Iterator over the bytes contained by the buffer. +/// +/// This struct is created by the [`iter`] method on [`Buf`]. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// Basic usage: +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::Bytes; +/// +/// let buf = Bytes::from(&b"abc"[..]); +/// let mut iter = buf.into_iter(); +/// +/// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'a')); +/// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'b')); +/// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'c')); +/// assert_eq!(iter.next(), None); +/// ``` +/// +/// [`iter`]: trait.Buf.html#method.iter +/// [`Buf`]: trait.Buf.html +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct IntoIter { + inner: T, +} + +impl IntoIter { + /// Creates an iterator over the bytes contained by the buffer. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let buf = Bytes::from_static(b"abc"); + /// let mut iter = buf.into_iter(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'a')); + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'b')); + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'c')); + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), None); + /// ``` + pub(crate) fn new(inner: T) -> IntoIter { + IntoIter { inner } + } + + /// Consumes this `IntoIter`, returning the underlying value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, Bytes}; + /// + /// let buf = Bytes::from(&b"abc"[..]); + /// let mut iter = buf.into_iter(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'a')); + /// + /// let buf = iter.into_inner(); + /// assert_eq!(2, buf.remaining()); + /// ``` + pub fn into_inner(self) -> T { + self.inner + } + + /// Gets a reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, Bytes}; + /// + /// let buf = Bytes::from(&b"abc"[..]); + /// let mut iter = buf.into_iter(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'a')); + /// + /// assert_eq!(2, iter.get_ref().remaining()); + /// ``` + pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &T { + &self.inner + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, BytesMut}; + /// + /// let buf = BytesMut::from(&b"abc"[..]); + /// let mut iter = buf.into_iter(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'a')); + /// + /// iter.get_mut().advance(1); + /// + /// assert_eq!(iter.next(), Some(b'c')); + /// ``` + pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { + &mut self.inner + } +} + +impl Iterator for IntoIter { + type Item = u8; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option { + if !self.inner.has_remaining() { + return None; + } + + let b = self.inner.chunk()[0]; + self.inner.advance(1); + + Some(b) + } + + fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option) { + let rem = self.inner.remaining(); + (rem, Some(rem)) + } +} + +impl ExactSizeIterator for IntoIter {} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/limit.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/limit.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b422be538 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/limit.rs @@ -0,0 +1,75 @@ +use crate::buf::UninitSlice; +use crate::BufMut; + +use core::cmp; + +/// A `BufMut` adapter which limits the amount of bytes that can be written +/// to an underlying buffer. +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct Limit { + inner: T, + limit: usize, +} + +pub(super) fn new(inner: T, limit: usize) -> Limit { + Limit { inner, limit } +} + +impl Limit { + /// Consumes this `Limit`, returning the underlying value. + pub fn into_inner(self) -> T { + self.inner + } + + /// Gets a reference to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly write to the underlying `BufMut`. + pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &T { + &self.inner + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly write to the underlying `BufMut`. + pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { + &mut self.inner + } + + /// Returns the maximum number of bytes that can be written + /// + /// # Note + /// + /// If the inner `BufMut` has fewer bytes than indicated by this method then + /// that is the actual number of available bytes. + pub fn limit(&self) -> usize { + self.limit + } + + /// Sets the maximum number of bytes that can be written. + /// + /// # Note + /// + /// If the inner `BufMut` has fewer bytes than `lim` then that is the actual + /// number of available bytes. + pub fn set_limit(&mut self, lim: usize) { + self.limit = lim + } +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for Limit { + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + cmp::min(self.inner.remaining_mut(), self.limit) + } + + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + let bytes = self.inner.chunk_mut(); + let end = cmp::min(bytes.len(), self.limit); + &mut bytes[..end] + } + + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + assert!(cnt <= self.limit); + self.inner.advance_mut(cnt); + self.limit -= cnt; + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/mod.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/mod.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c4c0a5724 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/mod.rs @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@ +//! Utilities for working with buffers. +//! +//! A buffer is any structure that contains a sequence of bytes. The bytes may +//! or may not be stored in contiguous memory. This module contains traits used +//! to abstract over buffers as well as utilities for working with buffer types. +//! +//! # `Buf`, `BufMut` +//! +//! These are the two foundational traits for abstractly working with buffers. +//! They can be thought as iterators for byte structures. They offer additional +//! performance over `Iterator` by providing an API optimized for byte slices. +//! +//! See [`Buf`] and [`BufMut`] for more details. +//! +//! [rope]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_(data_structure) +//! [`Buf`]: trait.Buf.html +//! [`BufMut`]: trait.BufMut.html + +mod buf_impl; +mod buf_mut; +mod chain; +mod iter; +mod limit; +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +mod reader; +mod take; +mod uninit_slice; +mod vec_deque; +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +mod writer; + +pub use self::buf_impl::Buf; +pub use self::buf_mut::BufMut; +pub use self::chain::Chain; +pub use self::iter::IntoIter; +pub use self::limit::Limit; +pub use self::take::Take; +pub use self::uninit_slice::UninitSlice; + +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +pub use self::{reader::Reader, writer::Writer}; diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/reader.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/reader.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f2b4d98f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/reader.rs @@ -0,0 +1,81 @@ +use crate::Buf; + +use std::{cmp, io}; + +/// A `Buf` adapter which implements `io::Read` for the inner value. +/// +/// This struct is generally created by calling `reader()` on `Buf`. See +/// documentation of [`reader()`](trait.Buf.html#method.reader) for more +/// details. +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct Reader { + buf: B, +} + +pub fn new(buf: B) -> Reader { + Reader { buf } +} + +impl Reader { + /// Gets a reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let buf = b"hello world".reader(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(b"hello world", buf.get_ref()); + /// ``` + pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &B { + &self.buf + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut B { + &mut self.buf + } + + /// Consumes this `Reader`, returning the underlying value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// use std::io; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world".reader(); + /// let mut dst = vec![]; + /// + /// io::copy(&mut buf, &mut dst).unwrap(); + /// + /// let buf = buf.into_inner(); + /// assert_eq!(0, buf.remaining()); + /// ``` + pub fn into_inner(self) -> B { + self.buf + } +} + +impl io::Read for Reader { + fn read(&mut self, dst: &mut [u8]) -> io::Result { + let len = cmp::min(self.buf.remaining(), dst.len()); + + Buf::copy_to_slice(&mut self.buf, &mut dst[0..len]); + Ok(len) + } +} + +impl io::BufRead for Reader { + fn fill_buf(&mut self) -> io::Result<&[u8]> { + Ok(self.buf.chunk()) + } + fn consume(&mut self, amt: usize) { + self.buf.advance(amt) + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/take.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/take.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1747f6e83 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/take.rs @@ -0,0 +1,147 @@ +use crate::Buf; + +use core::cmp; + +/// A `Buf` adapter which limits the bytes read from an underlying buffer. +/// +/// This struct is generally created by calling `take()` on `Buf`. See +/// documentation of [`take()`](trait.BufExt.html#method.take) for more details. +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct Take { + inner: T, + limit: usize, +} + +pub fn new(inner: T, limit: usize) -> Take { + Take { inner, limit } +} + +impl Take { + /// Consumes this `Take`, returning the underlying value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world".take(2); + /// let mut dst = vec![]; + /// + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(*dst, b"he"[..]); + /// + /// let mut buf = buf.into_inner(); + /// + /// dst.clear(); + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(*dst, b"llo world"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn into_inner(self) -> T { + self.inner + } + + /// Gets a reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let buf = b"hello world".take(2); + /// + /// assert_eq!(11, buf.get_ref().remaining()); + /// ``` + pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &T { + &self.inner + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly read from the underlying `Buf`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world".take(2); + /// let mut dst = vec![]; + /// + /// buf.get_mut().advance(2); + /// + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(*dst, b"ll"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { + &mut self.inner + } + + /// Returns the maximum number of bytes that can be read. + /// + /// # Note + /// + /// If the inner `Buf` has fewer bytes than indicated by this method then + /// that is the actual number of available bytes. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::Buf; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world".take(2); + /// + /// assert_eq!(2, buf.limit()); + /// assert_eq!(b'h', buf.get_u8()); + /// assert_eq!(1, buf.limit()); + /// ``` + pub fn limit(&self) -> usize { + self.limit + } + + /// Sets the maximum number of bytes that can be read. + /// + /// # Note + /// + /// If the inner `Buf` has fewer bytes than `lim` then that is the actual + /// number of available bytes. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::{Buf, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = b"hello world".take(2); + /// let mut dst = vec![]; + /// + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(*dst, b"he"[..]); + /// + /// dst.clear(); + /// + /// buf.set_limit(3); + /// dst.put(&mut buf); + /// assert_eq!(*dst, b"llo"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn set_limit(&mut self, lim: usize) { + self.limit = lim + } +} + +impl Buf for Take { + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + cmp::min(self.inner.remaining(), self.limit) + } + + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + let bytes = self.inner.chunk(); + &bytes[..cmp::min(bytes.len(), self.limit)] + } + + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + assert!(cnt <= self.limit); + self.inner.advance(cnt); + self.limit -= cnt; + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/uninit_slice.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/uninit_slice.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..73f4e8924 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/uninit_slice.rs @@ -0,0 +1,176 @@ +use core::fmt; +use core::mem::MaybeUninit; +use core::ops::{ + Index, IndexMut, Range, RangeFrom, RangeFull, RangeInclusive, RangeTo, RangeToInclusive, +}; + +/// Uninitialized byte slice. +/// +/// Returned by `BufMut::chunk_mut()`, the referenced byte slice may be +/// uninitialized. The wrapper provides safe access without introducing +/// undefined behavior. +/// +/// The safety invariants of this wrapper are: +/// +/// 1. Reading from an `UninitSlice` is undefined behavior. +/// 2. Writing uninitialized bytes to an `UninitSlice` is undefined behavior. +/// +/// The difference between `&mut UninitSlice` and `&mut [MaybeUninit]` is +/// that it is possible in safe code to write uninitialized bytes to an +/// `&mut [MaybeUninit]`, which this type prohibits. +#[repr(transparent)] +pub struct UninitSlice([MaybeUninit]); + +impl UninitSlice { + /// Create a `&mut UninitSlice` from a pointer and a length. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The caller must ensure that `ptr` references a valid memory region owned + /// by the caller representing a byte slice for the duration of `'a`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::buf::UninitSlice; + /// + /// let bytes = b"hello world".to_vec(); + /// let ptr = bytes.as_ptr() as *mut _; + /// let len = bytes.len(); + /// + /// let slice = unsafe { UninitSlice::from_raw_parts_mut(ptr, len) }; + /// ``` + pub unsafe fn from_raw_parts_mut<'a>(ptr: *mut u8, len: usize) -> &'a mut UninitSlice { + let maybe_init: &mut [MaybeUninit] = + core::slice::from_raw_parts_mut(ptr as *mut _, len); + &mut *(maybe_init as *mut [MaybeUninit] as *mut UninitSlice) + } + + /// Write a single byte at the specified offset. + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// The function panics if `index` is out of bounds. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::buf::UninitSlice; + /// + /// let mut data = [b'f', b'o', b'o']; + /// let slice = unsafe { UninitSlice::from_raw_parts_mut(data.as_mut_ptr(), 3) }; + /// + /// slice.write_byte(0, b'b'); + /// + /// assert_eq!(b"boo", &data[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn write_byte(&mut self, index: usize, byte: u8) { + assert!(index < self.len()); + + unsafe { self[index..].as_mut_ptr().write(byte) } + } + + /// Copies bytes from `src` into `self`. + /// + /// The length of `src` must be the same as `self`. + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// The function panics if `src` has a different length than `self`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::buf::UninitSlice; + /// + /// let mut data = [b'f', b'o', b'o']; + /// let slice = unsafe { UninitSlice::from_raw_parts_mut(data.as_mut_ptr(), 3) }; + /// + /// slice.copy_from_slice(b"bar"); + /// + /// assert_eq!(b"bar", &data[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn copy_from_slice(&mut self, src: &[u8]) { + use core::ptr; + + assert_eq!(self.len(), src.len()); + + unsafe { + ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src.as_ptr(), self.as_mut_ptr(), self.len()); + } + } + + /// Return a raw pointer to the slice's buffer. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The caller **must not** read from the referenced memory and **must not** + /// write **uninitialized** bytes to the slice either. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut data = [0, 1, 2]; + /// let mut slice = &mut data[..]; + /// let ptr = BufMut::chunk_mut(&mut slice).as_mut_ptr(); + /// ``` + pub fn as_mut_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut u8 { + self.0.as_mut_ptr() as *mut _ + } + + /// Returns the number of bytes in the slice. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut data = [0, 1, 2]; + /// let mut slice = &mut data[..]; + /// let len = BufMut::chunk_mut(&mut slice).len(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(len, 3); + /// ``` + pub fn len(&self) -> usize { + self.0.len() + } +} + +impl fmt::Debug for UninitSlice { + fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + fmt.debug_struct("UninitSlice[...]").finish() + } +} + +macro_rules! impl_index { + ($($t:ty),*) => { + $( + impl Index<$t> for UninitSlice { + type Output = UninitSlice; + + fn index(&self, index: $t) -> &UninitSlice { + let maybe_uninit: &[MaybeUninit] = &self.0[index]; + unsafe { &*(maybe_uninit as *const [MaybeUninit] as *const UninitSlice) } + } + } + + impl IndexMut<$t> for UninitSlice { + fn index_mut(&mut self, index: $t) -> &mut UninitSlice { + let maybe_uninit: &mut [MaybeUninit] = &mut self.0[index]; + unsafe { &mut *(maybe_uninit as *mut [MaybeUninit] as *mut UninitSlice) } + } + } + )* + }; +} + +impl_index!( + Range, + RangeFrom, + RangeFull, + RangeInclusive, + RangeTo, + RangeToInclusive +); diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/vec_deque.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/vec_deque.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..263167e83 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/vec_deque.rs @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +use alloc::collections::VecDeque; + +use super::Buf; + +impl Buf for VecDeque { + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + self.len() + } + + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + let (s1, s2) = self.as_slices(); + if s1.is_empty() { + s2 + } else { + s1 + } + } + + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + self.drain(..cnt); + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/buf/writer.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/writer.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..261d7cd09 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/buf/writer.rs @@ -0,0 +1,88 @@ +use crate::BufMut; + +use std::{cmp, io}; + +/// A `BufMut` adapter which implements `io::Write` for the inner value. +/// +/// This struct is generally created by calling `writer()` on `BufMut`. See +/// documentation of [`writer()`](trait.BufMut.html#method.writer) for more +/// details. +#[derive(Debug)] +pub struct Writer { + buf: B, +} + +pub fn new(buf: B) -> Writer { + Writer { buf } +} + +impl Writer { + /// Gets a reference to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly write to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let buf = Vec::with_capacity(1024).writer(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(1024, buf.get_ref().capacity()); + /// ``` + pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &B { + &self.buf + } + + /// Gets a mutable reference to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// It is inadvisable to directly write to the underlying `BufMut`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![].writer(); + /// + /// buf.get_mut().reserve(1024); + /// + /// assert_eq!(1024, buf.get_ref().capacity()); + /// ``` + pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut B { + &mut self.buf + } + + /// Consumes this `Writer`, returning the underlying value. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ```rust + /// use bytes::BufMut; + /// use std::io; + /// + /// let mut buf = vec![].writer(); + /// let mut src = &b"hello world"[..]; + /// + /// io::copy(&mut src, &mut buf).unwrap(); + /// + /// let buf = buf.into_inner(); + /// assert_eq!(*buf, b"hello world"[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn into_inner(self) -> B { + self.buf + } +} + +impl io::Write for Writer { + fn write(&mut self, src: &[u8]) -> io::Result { + let n = cmp::min(self.buf.remaining_mut(), src.len()); + + self.buf.put(&src[0..n]); + Ok(n) + } + + fn flush(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> { + Ok(()) + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/bytes.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/bytes.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b1b35ea83 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/bytes.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1138 @@ +use core::iter::FromIterator; +use core::ops::{Deref, RangeBounds}; +use core::{cmp, fmt, hash, mem, ptr, slice, usize}; + +use alloc::{borrow::Borrow, boxed::Box, string::String, vec::Vec}; + +use crate::buf::IntoIter; +#[allow(unused)] +use crate::loom::sync::atomic::AtomicMut; +use crate::loom::sync::atomic::{self, AtomicPtr, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; +use crate::Buf; + +/// A cheaply cloneable and sliceable chunk of contiguous memory. +/// +/// `Bytes` is an efficient container for storing and operating on contiguous +/// slices of memory. It is intended for use primarily in networking code, but +/// could have applications elsewhere as well. +/// +/// `Bytes` values facilitate zero-copy network programming by allowing multiple +/// `Bytes` objects to point to the same underlying memory. +/// +/// `Bytes` does not have a single implementation. It is an interface, whose +/// exact behavior is implemented through dynamic dispatch in several underlying +/// implementations of `Bytes`. +/// +/// All `Bytes` implementations must fulfill the following requirements: +/// - They are cheaply cloneable and thereby shareable between an unlimited amount +/// of components, for example by modifying a reference count. +/// - Instances can be sliced to refer to a subset of the the original buffer. +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::Bytes; +/// +/// let mut mem = Bytes::from("Hello world"); +/// let a = mem.slice(0..5); +/// +/// assert_eq!(a, "Hello"); +/// +/// let b = mem.split_to(6); +/// +/// assert_eq!(mem, "world"); +/// assert_eq!(b, "Hello "); +/// ``` +/// +/// # Memory layout +/// +/// The `Bytes` struct itself is fairly small, limited to 4 `usize` fields used +/// to track information about which segment of the underlying memory the +/// `Bytes` handle has access to. +/// +/// `Bytes` keeps both a pointer to the shared state containing the full memory +/// slice and a pointer to the start of the region visible by the handle. +/// `Bytes` also tracks the length of its view into the memory. +/// +/// # Sharing +/// +/// `Bytes` contains a vtable, which allows implementations of `Bytes` to define +/// how sharing/cloneing is implemented in detail. +/// When `Bytes::clone()` is called, `Bytes` will call the vtable function for +/// cloning the backing storage in order to share it behind between multiple +/// `Bytes` instances. +/// +/// For `Bytes` implementations which refer to constant memory (e.g. created +/// via `Bytes::from_static()`) the cloning implementation will be a no-op. +/// +/// For `Bytes` implementations which point to a reference counted shared storage +/// (e.g. an `Arc<[u8]>`), sharing will be implemented by increasing the +/// the reference count. +/// +/// Due to this mechanism, multiple `Bytes` instances may point to the same +/// shared memory region. +/// Each `Bytes` instance can point to different sections within that +/// memory region, and `Bytes` instances may or may not have overlapping views +/// into the memory. +/// +/// The following diagram visualizes a scenario where 2 `Bytes` instances make +/// use of an `Arc`-based backing storage, and provide access to different views: +/// +/// ```text +/// +/// Arc ptrs +---------+ +/// ________________________ / | Bytes 2 | +/// / +---------+ +/// / +-----------+ | | +/// |_________/ | Bytes 1 | | | +/// | +-----------+ | | +/// | | | ___/ data | tail +/// | data | tail |/ | +/// v v v v +/// +-----+---------------------------------+-----+ +/// | Arc | | | | | +/// +-----+---------------------------------+-----+ +/// ``` +pub struct Bytes { + ptr: *const u8, + len: usize, + // inlined "trait object" + data: AtomicPtr<()>, + vtable: &'static Vtable, +} + +pub(crate) struct Vtable { + /// fn(data, ptr, len) + pub clone: unsafe fn(&AtomicPtr<()>, *const u8, usize) -> Bytes, + /// fn(data, ptr, len) + pub drop: unsafe fn(&mut AtomicPtr<()>, *const u8, usize), +} + +impl Bytes { + /// Creates a new empty `Bytes`. + /// + /// This will not allocate and the returned `Bytes` handle will be empty. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let b = Bytes::new(); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b""); + /// ``` + #[inline] + #[cfg(not(all(loom, test)))] + pub const fn new() -> Bytes { + // Make it a named const to work around + // "unsizing casts are not allowed in const fn" + const EMPTY: &[u8] = &[]; + Bytes::from_static(EMPTY) + } + + #[cfg(all(loom, test))] + pub fn new() -> Bytes { + const EMPTY: &[u8] = &[]; + Bytes::from_static(EMPTY) + } + + /// Creates a new `Bytes` from a static slice. + /// + /// The returned `Bytes` will point directly to the static slice. There is + /// no allocating or copying. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let b = Bytes::from_static(b"hello"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"hello"); + /// ``` + #[inline] + #[cfg(not(all(loom, test)))] + pub const fn from_static(bytes: &'static [u8]) -> Bytes { + Bytes { + ptr: bytes.as_ptr(), + len: bytes.len(), + data: AtomicPtr::new(ptr::null_mut()), + vtable: &STATIC_VTABLE, + } + } + + #[cfg(all(loom, test))] + pub fn from_static(bytes: &'static [u8]) -> Bytes { + Bytes { + ptr: bytes.as_ptr(), + len: bytes.len(), + data: AtomicPtr::new(ptr::null_mut()), + vtable: &STATIC_VTABLE, + } + } + + /// Returns the number of bytes contained in this `Bytes`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let b = Bytes::from(&b"hello"[..]); + /// assert_eq!(b.len(), 5); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn len(&self) -> usize { + self.len + } + + /// Returns true if the `Bytes` has a length of 0. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let b = Bytes::new(); + /// assert!(b.is_empty()); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { + self.len == 0 + } + + /// Creates `Bytes` instance from slice, by copying it. + pub fn copy_from_slice(data: &[u8]) -> Self { + data.to_vec().into() + } + + /// Returns a slice of self for the provided range. + /// + /// This will increment the reference count for the underlying memory and + /// return a new `Bytes` handle set to the slice. + /// + /// This operation is `O(1)`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let a = Bytes::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let b = a.slice(2..5); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"llo"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Requires that `begin <= end` and `end <= self.len()`, otherwise slicing + /// will panic. + pub fn slice(&self, range: impl RangeBounds) -> Bytes { + use core::ops::Bound; + + let len = self.len(); + + let begin = 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.checked_add(1).expect("out of range"), + Bound::Excluded(&n) => n, + Bound::Unbounded => len, + }; + + assert!( + begin <= end, + "range start must not be greater than end: {:?} <= {:?}", + begin, + end, + ); + assert!( + end <= len, + "range end out of bounds: {:?} <= {:?}", + end, + len, + ); + + if end == begin { + return Bytes::new(); + } + + let mut ret = self.clone(); + + ret.len = end - begin; + ret.ptr = unsafe { ret.ptr.offset(begin as isize) }; + + ret + } + + /// Returns a slice of self that is equivalent to the given `subset`. + /// + /// When processing a `Bytes` buffer with other tools, one often gets a + /// `&[u8]` which is in fact a slice of the `Bytes`, i.e. a subset of it. + /// This function turns that `&[u8]` into another `Bytes`, as if one had + /// called `self.slice()` with the offsets that correspond to `subset`. + /// + /// This operation is `O(1)`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let bytes = Bytes::from(&b"012345678"[..]); + /// let as_slice = bytes.as_ref(); + /// let subset = &as_slice[2..6]; + /// let subslice = bytes.slice_ref(&subset); + /// assert_eq!(&subslice[..], b"2345"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Requires that the given `sub` slice is in fact contained within the + /// `Bytes` buffer; otherwise this function will panic. + pub fn slice_ref(&self, subset: &[u8]) -> Bytes { + // Empty slice and empty Bytes may have their pointers reset + // so explicitly allow empty slice to be a subslice of any slice. + if subset.is_empty() { + return Bytes::new(); + } + + let bytes_p = self.as_ptr() as usize; + let bytes_len = self.len(); + + let sub_p = subset.as_ptr() as usize; + let sub_len = subset.len(); + + assert!( + sub_p >= bytes_p, + "subset pointer ({:p}) is smaller than self pointer ({:p})", + sub_p as *const u8, + bytes_p as *const u8, + ); + assert!( + sub_p + sub_len <= bytes_p + bytes_len, + "subset is out of bounds: self = ({:p}, {}), subset = ({:p}, {})", + bytes_p as *const u8, + bytes_len, + sub_p as *const u8, + sub_len, + ); + + let sub_offset = sub_p - bytes_p; + + self.slice(sub_offset..(sub_offset + sub_len)) + } + + /// Splits the bytes into two at the given index. + /// + /// Afterwards `self` contains elements `[0, at)`, and the returned `Bytes` + /// contains elements `[at, len)`. + /// + /// This is an `O(1)` operation that just increases the reference count and + /// sets a few indices. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let mut a = Bytes::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let b = a.split_off(5); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&a[..], b"hello"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b" world"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if `at > len`. + #[must_use = "consider Bytes::truncate if you don't need the other half"] + pub fn split_off(&mut self, at: usize) -> Bytes { + assert!( + at <= self.len(), + "split_off out of bounds: {:?} <= {:?}", + at, + self.len(), + ); + + if at == self.len() { + return Bytes::new(); + } + + if at == 0 { + return mem::replace(self, Bytes::new()); + } + + let mut ret = self.clone(); + + self.len = at; + + unsafe { ret.inc_start(at) }; + + ret + } + + /// Splits the bytes into two at the given index. + /// + /// Afterwards `self` contains elements `[at, len)`, and the returned + /// `Bytes` contains elements `[0, at)`. + /// + /// This is an `O(1)` operation that just increases the reference count and + /// sets a few indices. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let mut a = Bytes::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let b = a.split_to(5); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&a[..], b" world"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"hello"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if `at > len`. + #[must_use = "consider Bytes::advance if you don't need the other half"] + pub fn split_to(&mut self, at: usize) -> Bytes { + assert!( + at <= self.len(), + "split_to out of bounds: {:?} <= {:?}", + at, + self.len(), + ); + + if at == self.len() { + return mem::replace(self, Bytes::new()); + } + + if at == 0 { + return Bytes::new(); + } + + let mut ret = self.clone(); + + unsafe { self.inc_start(at) }; + + ret.len = at; + ret + } + + /// Shortens the buffer, keeping the first `len` bytes and dropping the + /// rest. + /// + /// If `len` is greater than the buffer's current length, this has no + /// effect. + /// + /// The [`split_off`] method can emulate `truncate`, but this causes the + /// excess bytes to be returned instead of dropped. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let mut buf = Bytes::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// buf.truncate(5); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello"[..]); + /// ``` + /// + /// [`split_off`]: #method.split_off + #[inline] + pub fn truncate(&mut self, len: usize) { + if len < self.len { + // The Vec "promotable" vtables do not store the capacity, + // so we cannot truncate while using this repr. We *have* to + // promote using `split_off` so the capacity can be stored. + if self.vtable as *const Vtable == &PROMOTABLE_EVEN_VTABLE + || self.vtable as *const Vtable == &PROMOTABLE_ODD_VTABLE + { + drop(self.split_off(len)); + } else { + self.len = len; + } + } + } + + /// Clears the buffer, removing all data. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::Bytes; + /// + /// let mut buf = Bytes::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// buf.clear(); + /// assert!(buf.is_empty()); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn clear(&mut self) { + self.truncate(0); + } + + #[inline] + pub(crate) unsafe fn with_vtable( + ptr: *const u8, + len: usize, + data: AtomicPtr<()>, + vtable: &'static Vtable, + ) -> Bytes { + Bytes { + ptr, + len, + data, + vtable, + } + } + + // private + + #[inline] + fn as_slice(&self) -> &[u8] { + unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(self.ptr, self.len) } + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn inc_start(&mut self, by: usize) { + // should already be asserted, but debug assert for tests + debug_assert!(self.len >= by, "internal: inc_start out of bounds"); + self.len -= by; + self.ptr = self.ptr.offset(by as isize); + } +} + +// Vtable must enforce this behavior +unsafe impl Send for Bytes {} +unsafe impl Sync for Bytes {} + +impl Drop for Bytes { + #[inline] + fn drop(&mut self) { + unsafe { (self.vtable.drop)(&mut self.data, self.ptr, self.len) } + } +} + +impl Clone for Bytes { + #[inline] + fn clone(&self) -> Bytes { + unsafe { (self.vtable.clone)(&self.data, self.ptr, self.len) } + } +} + +impl Buf for Bytes { + #[inline] + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + self.len() + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } + + #[inline] + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + assert!( + cnt <= self.len(), + "cannot advance past `remaining`: {:?} <= {:?}", + cnt, + self.len(), + ); + + unsafe { + self.inc_start(cnt); + } + } + + fn copy_to_bytes(&mut self, len: usize) -> crate::Bytes { + if len == self.remaining() { + core::mem::replace(self, Bytes::new()) + } else { + let ret = self.slice(..len); + self.advance(len); + ret + } + } +} + +impl Deref for Bytes { + type Target = [u8]; + + #[inline] + fn deref(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } +} + +impl AsRef<[u8]> for Bytes { + #[inline] + fn as_ref(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } +} + +impl hash::Hash for Bytes { + fn hash(&self, state: &mut H) + where + H: hash::Hasher, + { + self.as_slice().hash(state); + } +} + +impl Borrow<[u8]> for Bytes { + fn borrow(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } +} + +impl IntoIterator for Bytes { + type Item = u8; + type IntoIter = IntoIter; + + fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { + IntoIter::new(self) + } +} + +impl<'a> IntoIterator for &'a Bytes { + type Item = &'a u8; + type IntoIter = core::slice::Iter<'a, u8>; + + fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { + self.as_slice().into_iter() + } +} + +impl FromIterator for Bytes { + fn from_iter>(into_iter: T) -> Self { + Vec::from_iter(into_iter).into() + } +} + +// impl Eq + +impl PartialEq for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + self.as_slice() == other.as_slice() + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for Bytes { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(other.as_slice()) + } +} + +impl Ord for Bytes { + fn cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> cmp::Ordering { + self.as_slice().cmp(other.as_slice()) + } +} + +impl Eq for Bytes {} + +impl PartialEq<[u8]> for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &[u8]) -> bool { + self.as_slice() == other + } +} + +impl PartialOrd<[u8]> for Bytes { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &[u8]) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for [u8] { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for [u8] { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self, other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &str) -> bool { + self.as_slice() == other.as_bytes() + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for Bytes { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &str) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(other.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for str { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for str { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self.as_bytes(), other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq> for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &Vec) -> bool { + *self == &other[..] + } +} + +impl PartialOrd> for Bytes { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Vec) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(&other[..]) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for Vec { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for Vec { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self, other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool { + *self == &other[..] + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for Bytes { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &String) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(other.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for String { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for String { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self.as_bytes(), other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for &[u8] { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for &[u8] { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self, other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for &str { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for &str { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Bytes) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self.as_bytes(), other) + } +} + +impl<'a, T: ?Sized> PartialEq<&'a T> for Bytes +where + Bytes: PartialEq, +{ + fn eq(&self, other: &&'a T) -> bool { + *self == **other + } +} + +impl<'a, T: ?Sized> PartialOrd<&'a T> for Bytes +where + Bytes: PartialOrd, +{ + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &&'a T) -> Option { + self.partial_cmp(&**other) + } +} + +// impl From + +impl Default for Bytes { + #[inline] + fn default() -> Bytes { + Bytes::new() + } +} + +impl From<&'static [u8]> for Bytes { + fn from(slice: &'static [u8]) -> Bytes { + Bytes::from_static(slice) + } +} + +impl From<&'static str> for Bytes { + fn from(slice: &'static str) -> Bytes { + Bytes::from_static(slice.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl From> for Bytes { + fn from(vec: Vec) -> Bytes { + // into_boxed_slice doesn't return a heap allocation for empty vectors, + // so the pointer isn't aligned enough for the KIND_VEC stashing to + // work. + if vec.is_empty() { + return Bytes::new(); + } + + let slice = vec.into_boxed_slice(); + let len = slice.len(); + let ptr = Box::into_raw(slice) as *mut u8; + + if ptr as usize & 0x1 == 0 { + let data = ptr as usize | KIND_VEC; + Bytes { + ptr, + len, + data: AtomicPtr::new(data as *mut _), + vtable: &PROMOTABLE_EVEN_VTABLE, + } + } else { + Bytes { + ptr, + len, + data: AtomicPtr::new(ptr as *mut _), + vtable: &PROMOTABLE_ODD_VTABLE, + } + } + } +} + +impl From for Bytes { + fn from(s: String) -> Bytes { + Bytes::from(s.into_bytes()) + } +} + +// ===== impl Vtable ===== + +impl fmt::Debug for Vtable { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + f.debug_struct("Vtable") + .field("clone", &(self.clone as *const ())) + .field("drop", &(self.drop as *const ())) + .finish() + } +} + +// ===== impl StaticVtable ===== + +const STATIC_VTABLE: Vtable = Vtable { + clone: static_clone, + drop: static_drop, +}; + +unsafe fn static_clone(_: &AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let slice = slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, len); + Bytes::from_static(slice) +} + +unsafe fn static_drop(_: &mut AtomicPtr<()>, _: *const u8, _: usize) { + // nothing to drop for &'static [u8] +} + +// ===== impl PromotableVtable ===== + +static PROMOTABLE_EVEN_VTABLE: Vtable = Vtable { + clone: promotable_even_clone, + drop: promotable_even_drop, +}; + +static PROMOTABLE_ODD_VTABLE: Vtable = Vtable { + clone: promotable_odd_clone, + drop: promotable_odd_drop, +}; + +unsafe fn promotable_even_clone(data: &AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let shared = data.load(Ordering::Acquire); + let kind = shared as usize & KIND_MASK; + + if kind == KIND_ARC { + shallow_clone_arc(shared as _, ptr, len) + } else { + debug_assert_eq!(kind, KIND_VEC); + let buf = (shared as usize & !KIND_MASK) as *mut u8; + shallow_clone_vec(data, shared, buf, ptr, len) + } +} + +unsafe fn promotable_even_drop(data: &mut AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) { + data.with_mut(|shared| { + let shared = *shared; + let kind = shared as usize & KIND_MASK; + + if kind == KIND_ARC { + release_shared(shared as *mut Shared); + } else { + debug_assert_eq!(kind, KIND_VEC); + let buf = (shared as usize & !KIND_MASK) as *mut u8; + drop(rebuild_boxed_slice(buf, ptr, len)); + } + }); +} + +unsafe fn promotable_odd_clone(data: &AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let shared = data.load(Ordering::Acquire); + let kind = shared as usize & KIND_MASK; + + if kind == KIND_ARC { + shallow_clone_arc(shared as _, ptr, len) + } else { + debug_assert_eq!(kind, KIND_VEC); + shallow_clone_vec(data, shared, shared as *mut u8, ptr, len) + } +} + +unsafe fn promotable_odd_drop(data: &mut AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) { + data.with_mut(|shared| { + let shared = *shared; + let kind = shared as usize & KIND_MASK; + + if kind == KIND_ARC { + release_shared(shared as *mut Shared); + } else { + debug_assert_eq!(kind, KIND_VEC); + + drop(rebuild_boxed_slice(shared as *mut u8, ptr, len)); + } + }); +} + +unsafe fn rebuild_boxed_slice(buf: *mut u8, offset: *const u8, len: usize) -> Box<[u8]> { + let cap = (offset as usize - buf as usize) + len; + Box::from_raw(slice::from_raw_parts_mut(buf, cap)) +} + +// ===== impl SharedVtable ===== + +struct Shared { + // holds vec for drop, but otherwise doesnt access it + _vec: Vec, + ref_cnt: AtomicUsize, +} + +// Assert that the alignment of `Shared` is divisible by 2. +// This is a necessary invariant since we depend on allocating `Shared` a +// shared object to implicitly carry the `KIND_ARC` flag in its pointer. +// This flag is set when the LSB is 0. +const _: [(); 0 - mem::align_of::() % 2] = []; // Assert that the alignment of `Shared` is divisible by 2. + +static SHARED_VTABLE: Vtable = Vtable { + clone: shared_clone, + drop: shared_drop, +}; + +const KIND_ARC: usize = 0b0; +const KIND_VEC: usize = 0b1; +const KIND_MASK: usize = 0b1; + +unsafe fn shared_clone(data: &AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let shared = data.load(Ordering::Relaxed); + shallow_clone_arc(shared as _, ptr, len) +} + +unsafe fn shared_drop(data: &mut AtomicPtr<()>, _ptr: *const u8, _len: usize) { + data.with_mut(|shared| { + release_shared(*shared as *mut Shared); + }); +} + +unsafe fn shallow_clone_arc(shared: *mut Shared, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let old_size = (*shared).ref_cnt.fetch_add(1, Ordering::Relaxed); + + if old_size > usize::MAX >> 1 { + crate::abort(); + } + + Bytes { + ptr, + len, + data: AtomicPtr::new(shared as _), + vtable: &SHARED_VTABLE, + } +} + +#[cold] +unsafe fn shallow_clone_vec( + atom: &AtomicPtr<()>, + ptr: *const (), + buf: *mut u8, + offset: *const u8, + len: usize, +) -> Bytes { + // If the buffer is still tracked in a `Vec`. It is time to + // promote the vec to an `Arc`. This could potentially be called + // concurrently, so some care must be taken. + + // First, allocate a new `Shared` instance containing the + // `Vec` fields. It's important to note that `ptr`, `len`, + // and `cap` cannot be mutated without having `&mut self`. + // This means that these fields will not be concurrently + // updated and since the buffer hasn't been promoted to an + // `Arc`, those three fields still are the components of the + // vector. + let vec = rebuild_boxed_slice(buf, offset, len).into_vec(); + let shared = Box::new(Shared { + _vec: vec, + // Initialize refcount to 2. One for this reference, and one + // for the new clone that will be returned from + // `shallow_clone`. + ref_cnt: AtomicUsize::new(2), + }); + + let shared = Box::into_raw(shared); + + // The pointer should be aligned, so this assert should + // always succeed. + debug_assert!( + 0 == (shared as usize & KIND_MASK), + "internal: Box should have an aligned pointer", + ); + + // Try compare & swapping the pointer into the `arc` field. + // `Release` is used synchronize with other threads that + // will load the `arc` field. + // + // If the `compare_exchange` fails, then the thread lost the + // race to promote the buffer to shared. The `Acquire` + // ordering will synchronize with the `compare_exchange` + // that happened in the other thread and the `Shared` + // pointed to by `actual` will be visible. + match atom.compare_exchange(ptr as _, shared as _, Ordering::AcqRel, Ordering::Acquire) { + Ok(actual) => { + debug_assert!(actual as usize == ptr as usize); + // The upgrade was successful, the new handle can be + // returned. + Bytes { + ptr: offset, + len, + data: AtomicPtr::new(shared as _), + vtable: &SHARED_VTABLE, + } + } + Err(actual) => { + // The upgrade failed, a concurrent clone happened. Release + // the allocation that was made in this thread, it will not + // be needed. + let shared = Box::from_raw(shared); + mem::forget(*shared); + + // Buffer already promoted to shared storage, so increment ref + // count. + shallow_clone_arc(actual as _, offset, len) + } + } +} + +unsafe fn release_shared(ptr: *mut Shared) { + // `Shared` storage... follow the drop steps from Arc. + if (*ptr).ref_cnt.fetch_sub(1, Ordering::Release) != 1 { + return; + } + + // This fence is needed to prevent reordering of use of the data and + // deletion of the data. Because it is marked `Release`, the decreasing + // of the reference count synchronizes with this `Acquire` fence. This + // means that use of the data happens before decreasing the reference + // count, which happens before this fence, which happens before the + // deletion of the data. + // + // As explained in the [Boost documentation][1], + // + // > It is important to enforce any possible access to the object in one + // > thread (through an existing reference) to *happen before* deleting + // > the object in a different thread. This is achieved by a "release" + // > operation after dropping a reference (any access to the object + // > through this reference must obviously happened before), and an + // > "acquire" operation before deleting the object. + // + // [1]: (www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/atomic/usage_examples.html) + atomic::fence(Ordering::Acquire); + + // Drop the data + Box::from_raw(ptr); +} + +// compile-fails + +/// ```compile_fail +/// use bytes::Bytes; +/// #[deny(unused_must_use)] +/// { +/// let mut b1 = Bytes::from("hello world"); +/// b1.split_to(6); +/// } +/// ``` +fn _split_to_must_use() {} + +/// ```compile_fail +/// use bytes::Bytes; +/// #[deny(unused_must_use)] +/// { +/// let mut b1 = Bytes::from("hello world"); +/// b1.split_off(6); +/// } +/// ``` +fn _split_off_must_use() {} + +// fuzz tests +#[cfg(all(test, loom))] +mod fuzz { + use loom::sync::Arc; + use loom::thread; + + use super::Bytes; + #[test] + fn bytes_cloning_vec() { + loom::model(|| { + let a = Bytes::from(b"abcdefgh".to_vec()); + let addr = a.as_ptr() as usize; + + // test the Bytes::clone is Sync by putting it in an Arc + let a1 = Arc::new(a); + let a2 = a1.clone(); + + let t1 = thread::spawn(move || { + let b: Bytes = (*a1).clone(); + assert_eq!(b.as_ptr() as usize, addr); + }); + + let t2 = thread::spawn(move || { + let b: Bytes = (*a2).clone(); + assert_eq!(b.as_ptr() as usize, addr); + }); + + t1.join().unwrap(); + t2.join().unwrap(); + }); + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/bytes_mut.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/bytes_mut.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..61c0460ca --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/bytes_mut.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1581 @@ +use core::iter::{FromIterator, Iterator}; +use core::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop}; +use core::ops::{Deref, DerefMut}; +use core::ptr::{self, NonNull}; +use core::{cmp, fmt, hash, isize, slice, usize}; + +use alloc::{ + borrow::{Borrow, BorrowMut}, + boxed::Box, + string::String, + vec::Vec, +}; + +use crate::buf::{IntoIter, UninitSlice}; +use crate::bytes::Vtable; +#[allow(unused)] +use crate::loom::sync::atomic::AtomicMut; +use crate::loom::sync::atomic::{self, AtomicPtr, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; +use crate::{Buf, BufMut, Bytes}; + +/// A unique reference to a contiguous slice of memory. +/// +/// `BytesMut` represents a unique view into a potentially shared memory region. +/// Given the uniqueness guarantee, owners of `BytesMut` handles are able to +/// mutate the memory. +/// +/// `BytesMut` can be thought of as containing a `buf: Arc>`, an offset +/// into `buf`, a slice length, and a guarantee that no other `BytesMut` for the +/// same `buf` overlaps with its slice. That guarantee means that a write lock +/// is not required. +/// +/// # Growth +/// +/// `BytesMut`'s `BufMut` implementation will implicitly grow its buffer as +/// necessary. However, explicitly reserving the required space up-front before +/// a series of inserts will be more efficient. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; +/// +/// let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); +/// +/// buf.put_u8(b'h'); +/// buf.put_u8(b'e'); +/// buf.put(&b"llo"[..]); +/// +/// assert_eq!(&buf[..], b"hello"); +/// +/// // Freeze the buffer so that it can be shared +/// let a = buf.freeze(); +/// +/// // This does not allocate, instead `b` points to the same memory. +/// let b = a.clone(); +/// +/// assert_eq!(&a[..], b"hello"); +/// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"hello"); +/// ``` +pub struct BytesMut { + ptr: NonNull, + len: usize, + cap: usize, + data: *mut Shared, +} + +// Thread-safe reference-counted container for the shared storage. This mostly +// the same as `core::sync::Arc` but without the weak counter. The ref counting +// fns are based on the ones found in `std`. +// +// The main reason to use `Shared` instead of `core::sync::Arc` is that it ends +// up making the overall code simpler and easier to reason about. This is due to +// some of the logic around setting `Inner::arc` and other ways the `arc` field +// is used. Using `Arc` ended up requiring a number of funky transmutes and +// other shenanigans to make it work. +struct Shared { + vec: Vec, + original_capacity_repr: usize, + ref_count: AtomicUsize, +} + +// Buffer storage strategy flags. +const KIND_ARC: usize = 0b0; +const KIND_VEC: usize = 0b1; +const KIND_MASK: usize = 0b1; + +// The max original capacity value. Any `Bytes` allocated with a greater initial +// capacity will default to this. +const MAX_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH: usize = 17; +// The original capacity algorithm will not take effect unless the originally +// allocated capacity was at least 1kb in size. +const MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH: usize = 10; +// The original capacity is stored in powers of 2 starting at 1kb to a max of +// 64kb. Representing it as such requires only 3 bits of storage. +const ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_MASK: usize = 0b11100; +const ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_OFFSET: usize = 2; + +// When the storage is in the `Vec` representation, the pointer can be advanced +// at most this value. This is due to the amount of storage available to track +// the offset is usize - number of KIND bits and number of ORIGINAL_CAPACITY +// bits. +const VEC_POS_OFFSET: usize = 5; +const MAX_VEC_POS: usize = usize::MAX >> VEC_POS_OFFSET; +const NOT_VEC_POS_MASK: usize = 0b11111; + +#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")] +const PTR_WIDTH: usize = 64; +#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")] +const PTR_WIDTH: usize = 32; + +/* + * + * ===== BytesMut ===== + * + */ + +impl BytesMut { + /// Creates a new `BytesMut` with the specified capacity. + /// + /// The returned `BytesMut` will be able to hold at least `capacity` bytes + /// without reallocating. + /// + /// It is important to note that this function does not specify the length + /// of the returned `BytesMut`, but only the capacity. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut bytes = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); + /// + /// // `bytes` contains no data, even though there is capacity + /// assert_eq!(bytes.len(), 0); + /// + /// bytes.put(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&bytes[..], b"hello world"); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn with_capacity(capacity: usize) -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::from_vec(Vec::with_capacity(capacity)) + } + + /// Creates a new `BytesMut` with default capacity. + /// + /// Resulting object has length 0 and unspecified capacity. + /// This function does not allocate. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut bytes = BytesMut::new(); + /// + /// assert_eq!(0, bytes.len()); + /// + /// bytes.reserve(2); + /// bytes.put_slice(b"xy"); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&b"xy"[..], &bytes[..]); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn new() -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::with_capacity(0) + } + + /// Returns the number of bytes contained in this `BytesMut`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let b = BytesMut::from(&b"hello"[..]); + /// assert_eq!(b.len(), 5); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn len(&self) -> usize { + self.len + } + + /// Returns true if the `BytesMut` has a length of 0. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let b = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); + /// assert!(b.is_empty()); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { + self.len == 0 + } + + /// Returns the number of bytes the `BytesMut` can hold without reallocating. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let b = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); + /// assert_eq!(b.capacity(), 64); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn capacity(&self) -> usize { + self.cap + } + + /// Converts `self` into an immutable `Bytes`. + /// + /// The conversion is zero cost and is used to indicate that the slice + /// referenced by the handle will no longer be mutated. Once the conversion + /// is done, the handle can be cloned and shared across threads. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; + /// use std::thread; + /// + /// let mut b = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); + /// b.put(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let b1 = b.freeze(); + /// let b2 = b1.clone(); + /// + /// let th = thread::spawn(move || { + /// assert_eq!(&b1[..], b"hello world"); + /// }); + /// + /// assert_eq!(&b2[..], b"hello world"); + /// th.join().unwrap(); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub fn freeze(mut self) -> Bytes { + if self.kind() == KIND_VEC { + // Just re-use `Bytes` internal Vec vtable + unsafe { + let (off, _) = self.get_vec_pos(); + let vec = rebuild_vec(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len, self.cap, off); + mem::forget(self); + let mut b: Bytes = vec.into(); + b.advance(off); + b + } + } else { + debug_assert_eq!(self.kind(), KIND_ARC); + + let ptr = self.ptr.as_ptr(); + let len = self.len; + let data = AtomicPtr::new(self.data as _); + mem::forget(self); + unsafe { Bytes::with_vtable(ptr, len, data, &SHARED_VTABLE) } + } + } + + /// Splits the bytes into two at the given index. + /// + /// Afterwards `self` contains elements `[0, at)`, and the returned + /// `BytesMut` contains elements `[at, capacity)`. + /// + /// This is an `O(1)` operation that just increases the reference count + /// and sets a few indices. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut a = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let mut b = a.split_off(5); + /// + /// a[0] = b'j'; + /// b[0] = b'!'; + /// + /// assert_eq!(&a[..], b"jello"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"!world"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if `at > capacity`. + #[must_use = "consider BytesMut::truncate if you don't need the other half"] + pub fn split_off(&mut self, at: usize) -> BytesMut { + assert!( + at <= self.capacity(), + "split_off out of bounds: {:?} <= {:?}", + at, + self.capacity(), + ); + unsafe { + let mut other = self.shallow_clone(); + other.set_start(at); + self.set_end(at); + other + } + } + + /// Removes the bytes from the current view, returning them in a new + /// `BytesMut` handle. + /// + /// Afterwards, `self` will be empty, but will retain any additional + /// capacity that it had before the operation. This is identical to + /// `self.split_to(self.len())`. + /// + /// This is an `O(1)` operation that just increases the reference count and + /// sets a few indices. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(1024); + /// buf.put(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// + /// let other = buf.split(); + /// + /// assert!(buf.is_empty()); + /// assert_eq!(1013, buf.capacity()); + /// + /// assert_eq!(other, b"hello world"[..]); + /// ``` + #[must_use = "consider BytesMut::advance(len()) if you don't need the other half"] + pub fn split(&mut self) -> BytesMut { + let len = self.len(); + self.split_to(len) + } + + /// Splits the buffer into two at the given index. + /// + /// Afterwards `self` contains elements `[at, len)`, and the returned `BytesMut` + /// contains elements `[0, at)`. + /// + /// This is an `O(1)` operation that just increases the reference count and + /// sets a few indices. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut a = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// let mut b = a.split_to(5); + /// + /// a[0] = b'!'; + /// b[0] = b'j'; + /// + /// assert_eq!(&a[..], b"!world"); + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"jello"); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if `at > len`. + #[must_use = "consider BytesMut::advance if you don't need the other half"] + pub fn split_to(&mut self, at: usize) -> BytesMut { + assert!( + at <= self.len(), + "split_to out of bounds: {:?} <= {:?}", + at, + self.len(), + ); + + unsafe { + let mut other = self.shallow_clone(); + other.set_end(at); + self.set_start(at); + other + } + } + + /// Shortens the buffer, keeping the first `len` bytes and dropping the + /// rest. + /// + /// If `len` is greater than the buffer's current length, this has no + /// effect. + /// + /// The [`split_off`] method can emulate `truncate`, but this causes the + /// excess bytes to be returned instead of dropped. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// buf.truncate(5); + /// assert_eq!(buf, b"hello"[..]); + /// ``` + /// + /// [`split_off`]: #method.split_off + pub fn truncate(&mut self, len: usize) { + if len <= self.len() { + unsafe { + self.set_len(len); + } + } + } + + /// Clears the buffer, removing all data. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// buf.clear(); + /// assert!(buf.is_empty()); + /// ``` + pub fn clear(&mut self) { + self.truncate(0); + } + + /// Resizes the buffer so that `len` is equal to `new_len`. + /// + /// If `new_len` is greater than `len`, the buffer is extended by the + /// difference with each additional byte set to `value`. If `new_len` is + /// less than `len`, the buffer is simply truncated. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::new(); + /// + /// buf.resize(3, 0x1); + /// assert_eq!(&buf[..], &[0x1, 0x1, 0x1]); + /// + /// buf.resize(2, 0x2); + /// assert_eq!(&buf[..], &[0x1, 0x1]); + /// + /// buf.resize(4, 0x3); + /// assert_eq!(&buf[..], &[0x1, 0x1, 0x3, 0x3]); + /// ``` + pub fn resize(&mut self, new_len: usize, value: u8) { + let len = self.len(); + if new_len > len { + let additional = new_len - len; + self.reserve(additional); + unsafe { + let dst = self.chunk_mut().as_mut_ptr(); + ptr::write_bytes(dst, value, additional); + self.set_len(new_len); + } + } else { + self.truncate(new_len); + } + } + + /// Sets the length of the buffer. + /// + /// This will explicitly set the size of the buffer without actually + /// modifying the data, so it is up to the caller to ensure that the data + /// has been initialized. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut b = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]); + /// + /// unsafe { + /// b.set_len(5); + /// } + /// + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"hello"); + /// + /// unsafe { + /// b.set_len(11); + /// } + /// + /// assert_eq!(&b[..], b"hello world"); + /// ``` + #[inline] + pub unsafe fn set_len(&mut self, len: usize) { + debug_assert!(len <= self.cap, "set_len out of bounds"); + self.len = len; + } + + /// Reserves capacity for at least `additional` more bytes to be inserted + /// into the given `BytesMut`. + /// + /// More than `additional` bytes may be reserved in order to avoid frequent + /// reallocations. A call to `reserve` may result in an allocation. + /// + /// Before allocating new buffer space, the function will attempt to reclaim + /// space in the existing buffer. If the current handle references a small + /// view in the original buffer and all other handles have been dropped, + /// and the requested capacity is less than or equal to the existing + /// buffer's capacity, then the current view will be copied to the front of + /// the buffer and the handle will take ownership of the full buffer. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// In the following example, a new buffer is allocated. + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::from(&b"hello"[..]); + /// buf.reserve(64); + /// assert!(buf.capacity() >= 69); + /// ``` + /// + /// In the following example, the existing buffer is reclaimed. + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(128); + /// buf.put(&[0; 64][..]); + /// + /// let ptr = buf.as_ptr(); + /// let other = buf.split(); + /// + /// assert!(buf.is_empty()); + /// assert_eq!(buf.capacity(), 64); + /// + /// drop(other); + /// buf.reserve(128); + /// + /// assert_eq!(buf.capacity(), 128); + /// assert_eq!(buf.as_ptr(), ptr); + /// ``` + /// + /// # Panics + /// + /// Panics if the new capacity overflows `usize`. + #[inline] + pub fn reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) { + let len = self.len(); + let rem = self.capacity() - len; + + if additional <= rem { + // The handle can already store at least `additional` more bytes, so + // there is no further work needed to be done. + return; + } + + self.reserve_inner(additional); + } + + // In separate function to allow the short-circuits in `reserve` to + // be inline-able. Significant helps performance. + fn reserve_inner(&mut self, additional: usize) { + let len = self.len(); + let kind = self.kind(); + + if kind == KIND_VEC { + // If there's enough free space before the start of the buffer, then + // just copy the data backwards and reuse the already-allocated + // space. + // + // Otherwise, since backed by a vector, use `Vec::reserve` + unsafe { + let (off, prev) = self.get_vec_pos(); + + // Only reuse space if we can satisfy the requested additional space. + if self.capacity() - self.len() + off >= additional { + // There's space - reuse it + // + // Just move the pointer back to the start after copying + // data back. + let base_ptr = self.ptr.as_ptr().offset(-(off as isize)); + ptr::copy(self.ptr.as_ptr(), base_ptr, self.len); + self.ptr = vptr(base_ptr); + self.set_vec_pos(0, prev); + + // Length stays constant, but since we moved backwards we + // can gain capacity back. + self.cap += off; + } else { + // No space - allocate more + let mut v = + ManuallyDrop::new(rebuild_vec(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len, self.cap, off)); + v.reserve(additional); + + // Update the info + self.ptr = vptr(v.as_mut_ptr().offset(off as isize)); + self.len = v.len() - off; + self.cap = v.capacity() - off; + } + + return; + } + } + + debug_assert_eq!(kind, KIND_ARC); + let shared: *mut Shared = self.data as _; + + // Reserving involves abandoning the currently shared buffer and + // allocating a new vector with the requested capacity. + // + // Compute the new capacity + let mut new_cap = len.checked_add(additional).expect("overflow"); + + let original_capacity; + let original_capacity_repr; + + unsafe { + original_capacity_repr = (*shared).original_capacity_repr; + original_capacity = original_capacity_from_repr(original_capacity_repr); + + // First, try to reclaim the buffer. This is possible if the current + // handle is the only outstanding handle pointing to the buffer. + if (*shared).is_unique() { + // This is the only handle to the buffer. It can be reclaimed. + // However, before doing the work of copying data, check to make + // sure that the vector has enough capacity. + let v = &mut (*shared).vec; + + if v.capacity() >= new_cap { + // The capacity is sufficient, reclaim the buffer + let ptr = v.as_mut_ptr(); + + ptr::copy(self.ptr.as_ptr(), ptr, len); + + self.ptr = vptr(ptr); + self.cap = v.capacity(); + + return; + } + + // The vector capacity is not sufficient. The reserve request is + // asking for more than the initial buffer capacity. Allocate more + // than requested if `new_cap` is not much bigger than the current + // capacity. + // + // There are some situations, using `reserve_exact` that the + // buffer capacity could be below `original_capacity`, so do a + // check. + let double = v.capacity().checked_shl(1).unwrap_or(new_cap); + + new_cap = cmp::max(cmp::max(double, new_cap), original_capacity); + } else { + new_cap = cmp::max(new_cap, original_capacity); + } + } + + // Create a new vector to store the data + let mut v = ManuallyDrop::new(Vec::with_capacity(new_cap)); + + // Copy the bytes + v.extend_from_slice(self.as_ref()); + + // Release the shared handle. This must be done *after* the bytes are + // copied. + unsafe { release_shared(shared) }; + + // Update self + let data = (original_capacity_repr << ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_OFFSET) | KIND_VEC; + self.data = data as _; + self.ptr = vptr(v.as_mut_ptr()); + self.len = v.len(); + self.cap = v.capacity(); + } + + /// Appends given bytes to this `BytesMut`. + /// + /// If this `BytesMut` object does not have enough capacity, it is resized + /// first. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(0); + /// buf.extend_from_slice(b"aaabbb"); + /// buf.extend_from_slice(b"cccddd"); + /// + /// assert_eq!(b"aaabbbcccddd", &buf[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn extend_from_slice(&mut self, extend: &[u8]) { + let cnt = extend.len(); + self.reserve(cnt); + + unsafe { + let dst = self.uninit_slice(); + // Reserved above + debug_assert!(dst.len() >= cnt); + + ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(extend.as_ptr(), dst.as_mut_ptr() as *mut u8, cnt); + } + + unsafe { + self.advance_mut(cnt); + } + } + + /// Absorbs a `BytesMut` that was previously split off. + /// + /// If the two `BytesMut` objects were previously contiguous, i.e., if + /// `other` was created by calling `split_off` on this `BytesMut`, then + /// this is an `O(1)` operation that just decreases a reference + /// count and sets a few indices. Otherwise this method degenerates to + /// `self.extend_from_slice(other.as_ref())`. + /// + /// # Examples + /// + /// ``` + /// use bytes::BytesMut; + /// + /// let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(64); + /// buf.extend_from_slice(b"aaabbbcccddd"); + /// + /// let split = buf.split_off(6); + /// assert_eq!(b"aaabbb", &buf[..]); + /// assert_eq!(b"cccddd", &split[..]); + /// + /// buf.unsplit(split); + /// assert_eq!(b"aaabbbcccddd", &buf[..]); + /// ``` + pub fn unsplit(&mut self, other: BytesMut) { + if self.is_empty() { + *self = other; + return; + } + + if let Err(other) = self.try_unsplit(other) { + self.extend_from_slice(other.as_ref()); + } + } + + // private + + // For now, use a `Vec` to manage the memory for us, but we may want to + // change that in the future to some alternate allocator strategy. + // + // Thus, we don't expose an easy way to construct from a `Vec` since an + // internal change could make a simple pattern (`BytesMut::from(vec)`) + // suddenly a lot more expensive. + #[inline] + pub(crate) fn from_vec(mut vec: Vec) -> BytesMut { + let ptr = vptr(vec.as_mut_ptr()); + let len = vec.len(); + let cap = vec.capacity(); + mem::forget(vec); + + let original_capacity_repr = original_capacity_to_repr(cap); + let data = (original_capacity_repr << ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_OFFSET) | KIND_VEC; + + BytesMut { + ptr, + len, + cap, + data: data as *mut _, + } + } + + #[inline] + fn as_slice(&self) -> &[u8] { + unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len) } + } + + #[inline] + fn as_slice_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] { + unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts_mut(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len) } + } + + unsafe fn set_start(&mut self, start: usize) { + // Setting the start to 0 is a no-op, so return early if this is the + // case. + if start == 0 { + return; + } + + debug_assert!(start <= self.cap, "internal: set_start out of bounds"); + + let kind = self.kind(); + + if kind == KIND_VEC { + // Setting the start when in vec representation is a little more + // complicated. First, we have to track how far ahead the + // "start" of the byte buffer from the beginning of the vec. We + // also have to ensure that we don't exceed the maximum shift. + let (mut pos, prev) = self.get_vec_pos(); + pos += start; + + if pos <= MAX_VEC_POS { + self.set_vec_pos(pos, prev); + } else { + // The repr must be upgraded to ARC. This will never happen + // on 64 bit systems and will only happen on 32 bit systems + // when shifting past 134,217,727 bytes. As such, we don't + // worry too much about performance here. + self.promote_to_shared(/*ref_count = */ 1); + } + } + + // Updating the start of the view is setting `ptr` to point to the + // new start and updating the `len` field to reflect the new length + // of the view. + self.ptr = vptr(self.ptr.as_ptr().offset(start as isize)); + + if self.len >= start { + self.len -= start; + } else { + self.len = 0; + } + + self.cap -= start; + } + + unsafe fn set_end(&mut self, end: usize) { + debug_assert_eq!(self.kind(), KIND_ARC); + assert!(end <= self.cap, "set_end out of bounds"); + + self.cap = end; + self.len = cmp::min(self.len, end); + } + + fn try_unsplit(&mut self, other: BytesMut) -> Result<(), BytesMut> { + if other.is_empty() { + return Ok(()); + } + + let ptr = unsafe { self.ptr.as_ptr().offset(self.len as isize) }; + if ptr == other.ptr.as_ptr() + && self.kind() == KIND_ARC + && other.kind() == KIND_ARC + && self.data == other.data + { + // Contiguous blocks, just combine directly + self.len += other.len; + self.cap += other.cap; + Ok(()) + } else { + Err(other) + } + } + + #[inline] + fn kind(&self) -> usize { + self.data as usize & KIND_MASK + } + + unsafe fn promote_to_shared(&mut self, ref_cnt: usize) { + debug_assert_eq!(self.kind(), KIND_VEC); + debug_assert!(ref_cnt == 1 || ref_cnt == 2); + + let original_capacity_repr = + (self.data as usize & ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_MASK) >> ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_OFFSET; + + // The vec offset cannot be concurrently mutated, so there + // should be no danger reading it. + let off = (self.data as usize) >> VEC_POS_OFFSET; + + // First, allocate a new `Shared` instance containing the + // `Vec` fields. It's important to note that `ptr`, `len`, + // and `cap` cannot be mutated without having `&mut self`. + // This means that these fields will not be concurrently + // updated and since the buffer hasn't been promoted to an + // `Arc`, those three fields still are the components of the + // vector. + let shared = Box::new(Shared { + vec: rebuild_vec(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len, self.cap, off), + original_capacity_repr, + ref_count: AtomicUsize::new(ref_cnt), + }); + + let shared = Box::into_raw(shared); + + // The pointer should be aligned, so this assert should + // always succeed. + debug_assert_eq!(shared as usize & KIND_MASK, KIND_ARC); + + self.data = shared as _; + } + + /// Makes an exact shallow clone of `self`. + /// + /// The kind of `self` doesn't matter, but this is unsafe + /// because the clone will have the same offsets. You must + /// be sure the returned value to the user doesn't allow + /// two views into the same range. + #[inline] + unsafe fn shallow_clone(&mut self) -> BytesMut { + if self.kind() == KIND_ARC { + increment_shared(self.data); + ptr::read(self) + } else { + self.promote_to_shared(/*ref_count = */ 2); + ptr::read(self) + } + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn get_vec_pos(&mut self) -> (usize, usize) { + debug_assert_eq!(self.kind(), KIND_VEC); + + let prev = self.data as usize; + (prev >> VEC_POS_OFFSET, prev) + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn set_vec_pos(&mut self, pos: usize, prev: usize) { + debug_assert_eq!(self.kind(), KIND_VEC); + debug_assert!(pos <= MAX_VEC_POS); + + self.data = ((pos << VEC_POS_OFFSET) | (prev & NOT_VEC_POS_MASK)) as *mut _; + } + + #[inline] + fn uninit_slice(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + unsafe { + let ptr = self.ptr.as_ptr().offset(self.len as isize); + let len = self.cap - self.len; + + UninitSlice::from_raw_parts_mut(ptr, len) + } + } +} + +impl Drop for BytesMut { + fn drop(&mut self) { + let kind = self.kind(); + + if kind == KIND_VEC { + unsafe { + let (off, _) = self.get_vec_pos(); + + // Vector storage, free the vector + let _ = rebuild_vec(self.ptr.as_ptr(), self.len, self.cap, off); + } + } else if kind == KIND_ARC { + unsafe { release_shared(self.data as _) }; + } + } +} + +impl Buf for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn remaining(&self) -> usize { + self.len() + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } + + #[inline] + fn advance(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + assert!( + cnt <= self.remaining(), + "cannot advance past `remaining`: {:?} <= {:?}", + cnt, + self.remaining(), + ); + unsafe { + self.set_start(cnt); + } + } + + fn copy_to_bytes(&mut self, len: usize) -> crate::Bytes { + self.split_to(len).freeze() + } +} + +unsafe impl BufMut for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn remaining_mut(&self) -> usize { + usize::MAX - self.len() + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn advance_mut(&mut self, cnt: usize) { + let new_len = self.len() + cnt; + assert!( + new_len <= self.cap, + "new_len = {}; capacity = {}", + new_len, + self.cap + ); + self.len = new_len; + } + + #[inline] + fn chunk_mut(&mut self) -> &mut UninitSlice { + if self.capacity() == self.len() { + self.reserve(64); + } + self.uninit_slice() + } + + // Specialize these methods so they can skip checking `remaining_mut` + // and `advance_mut`. + + fn put(&mut self, mut src: T) + where + Self: Sized, + { + while src.has_remaining() { + let s = src.chunk(); + let l = s.len(); + self.extend_from_slice(s); + src.advance(l); + } + } + + fn put_slice(&mut self, src: &[u8]) { + self.extend_from_slice(src); + } +} + +impl AsRef<[u8]> for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn as_ref(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_slice() + } +} + +impl Deref for BytesMut { + type Target = [u8]; + + #[inline] + fn deref(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_ref() + } +} + +impl AsMut<[u8]> for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn as_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] { + self.as_slice_mut() + } +} + +impl DerefMut for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] { + self.as_mut() + } +} + +impl<'a> From<&'a [u8]> for BytesMut { + fn from(src: &'a [u8]) -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::from_vec(src.to_vec()) + } +} + +impl<'a> From<&'a str> for BytesMut { + fn from(src: &'a str) -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::from(src.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl From for Bytes { + fn from(src: BytesMut) -> Bytes { + src.freeze() + } +} + +impl PartialEq for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + self.as_slice() == other.as_slice() + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for BytesMut { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + self.as_slice().partial_cmp(other.as_slice()) + } +} + +impl Ord for BytesMut { + fn cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> cmp::Ordering { + self.as_slice().cmp(other.as_slice()) + } +} + +impl Eq for BytesMut {} + +impl Default for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn default() -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::new() + } +} + +impl hash::Hash for BytesMut { + fn hash(&self, state: &mut H) + where + H: hash::Hasher, + { + let s: &[u8] = self.as_ref(); + s.hash(state); + } +} + +impl Borrow<[u8]> for BytesMut { + fn borrow(&self) -> &[u8] { + self.as_ref() + } +} + +impl BorrowMut<[u8]> for BytesMut { + fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] { + self.as_mut() + } +} + +impl fmt::Write for BytesMut { + #[inline] + fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result { + if self.remaining_mut() >= s.len() { + self.put_slice(s.as_bytes()); + Ok(()) + } else { + Err(fmt::Error) + } + } + + #[inline] + fn write_fmt(&mut self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + fmt::write(self, args) + } +} + +impl Clone for BytesMut { + fn clone(&self) -> BytesMut { + BytesMut::from(&self[..]) + } +} + +impl IntoIterator for BytesMut { + type Item = u8; + type IntoIter = IntoIter; + + fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { + IntoIter::new(self) + } +} + +impl<'a> IntoIterator for &'a BytesMut { + type Item = &'a u8; + type IntoIter = core::slice::Iter<'a, u8>; + + fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { + self.as_ref().into_iter() + } +} + +impl Extend for BytesMut { + fn extend(&mut self, iter: T) + where + T: IntoIterator, + { + let iter = iter.into_iter(); + + let (lower, _) = iter.size_hint(); + self.reserve(lower); + + // TODO: optimize + // 1. If self.kind() == KIND_VEC, use Vec::extend + // 2. Make `reserve` inline-able + for b in iter { + self.reserve(1); + self.put_u8(b); + } + } +} + +impl<'a> Extend<&'a u8> for BytesMut { + fn extend(&mut self, iter: T) + where + T: IntoIterator, + { + self.extend(iter.into_iter().map(|b| *b)) + } +} + +impl FromIterator for BytesMut { + fn from_iter>(into_iter: T) -> Self { + BytesMut::from_vec(Vec::from_iter(into_iter)) + } +} + +impl<'a> FromIterator<&'a u8> for BytesMut { + fn from_iter>(into_iter: T) -> Self { + BytesMut::from_iter(into_iter.into_iter().map(|b| *b)) + } +} + +/* + * + * ===== Inner ===== + * + */ + +unsafe fn increment_shared(ptr: *mut Shared) { + let old_size = (*ptr).ref_count.fetch_add(1, Ordering::Relaxed); + + if old_size > isize::MAX as usize { + crate::abort(); + } +} + +unsafe fn release_shared(ptr: *mut Shared) { + // `Shared` storage... follow the drop steps from Arc. + if (*ptr).ref_count.fetch_sub(1, Ordering::Release) != 1 { + return; + } + + // This fence is needed to prevent reordering of use of the data and + // deletion of the data. Because it is marked `Release`, the decreasing + // of the reference count synchronizes with this `Acquire` fence. This + // means that use of the data happens before decreasing the reference + // count, which happens before this fence, which happens before the + // deletion of the data. + // + // As explained in the [Boost documentation][1], + // + // > It is important to enforce any possible access to the object in one + // > thread (through an existing reference) to *happen before* deleting + // > the object in a different thread. This is achieved by a "release" + // > operation after dropping a reference (any access to the object + // > through this reference must obviously happened before), and an + // > "acquire" operation before deleting the object. + // + // [1]: (www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/atomic/usage_examples.html) + atomic::fence(Ordering::Acquire); + + // Drop the data + Box::from_raw(ptr); +} + +impl Shared { + fn is_unique(&self) -> bool { + // The goal is to check if the current handle is the only handle + // that currently has access to the buffer. This is done by + // checking if the `ref_count` is currently 1. + // + // The `Acquire` ordering synchronizes with the `Release` as + // part of the `fetch_sub` in `release_shared`. The `fetch_sub` + // operation guarantees that any mutations done in other threads + // are ordered before the `ref_count` is decremented. As such, + // this `Acquire` will guarantee that those mutations are + // visible to the current thread. + self.ref_count.load(Ordering::Acquire) == 1 + } +} + +fn original_capacity_to_repr(cap: usize) -> usize { + let width = PTR_WIDTH - ((cap >> MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH).leading_zeros() as usize); + cmp::min( + width, + MAX_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH - MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH, + ) +} + +fn original_capacity_from_repr(repr: usize) -> usize { + if repr == 0 { + return 0; + } + + 1 << (repr + (MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH - 1)) +} + +/* +#[test] +fn test_original_capacity_to_repr() { + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(0), 0); + + let max_width = 32; + + for width in 1..(max_width + 1) { + let cap = 1 << width - 1; + + let expected = if width < MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH { + 0 + } else if width < MAX_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH { + width - MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH + } else { + MAX_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH - MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH + }; + + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap), expected); + + if width > 1 { + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap + 1), expected); + } + + // MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH must be bigger than 7 to pass tests below + if width == MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH + 1 { + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap - 24), expected - 1); + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap + 76), expected); + } else if width == MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH + 2 { + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap - 1), expected - 1); + assert_eq!(original_capacity_to_repr(cap - 48), expected - 1); + } + } +} + +#[test] +fn test_original_capacity_from_repr() { + assert_eq!(0, original_capacity_from_repr(0)); + + let min_cap = 1 << MIN_ORIGINAL_CAPACITY_WIDTH; + + assert_eq!(min_cap, original_capacity_from_repr(1)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 2, original_capacity_from_repr(2)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 4, original_capacity_from_repr(3)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 8, original_capacity_from_repr(4)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 16, original_capacity_from_repr(5)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 32, original_capacity_from_repr(6)); + assert_eq!(min_cap * 64, original_capacity_from_repr(7)); +} +*/ + +unsafe impl Send for BytesMut {} +unsafe impl Sync for BytesMut {} + +/* + * + * ===== PartialEq / PartialOrd ===== + * + */ + +impl PartialEq<[u8]> for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &[u8]) -> bool { + &**self == other + } +} + +impl PartialOrd<[u8]> for BytesMut { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &[u8]) -> Option { + (**self).partial_cmp(other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for [u8] { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for [u8] { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self, other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &str) -> bool { + &**self == other.as_bytes() + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for BytesMut { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &str) -> Option { + (**self).partial_cmp(other.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for str { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for str { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self.as_bytes(), other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq> for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &Vec) -> bool { + *self == &other[..] + } +} + +impl PartialOrd> for BytesMut { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Vec) -> Option { + (**self).partial_cmp(&other[..]) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for Vec { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for Vec { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + other.partial_cmp(self) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool { + *self == &other[..] + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for BytesMut { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &String) -> Option { + (**self).partial_cmp(other.as_bytes()) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for String { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for String { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self.as_bytes(), other) + } +} + +impl<'a, T: ?Sized> PartialEq<&'a T> for BytesMut +where + BytesMut: PartialEq, +{ + fn eq(&self, other: &&'a T) -> bool { + *self == **other + } +} + +impl<'a, T: ?Sized> PartialOrd<&'a T> for BytesMut +where + BytesMut: PartialOrd, +{ + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &&'a T) -> Option { + self.partial_cmp(*other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for &[u8] { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for &[u8] { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + <[u8] as PartialOrd<[u8]>>::partial_cmp(self, other) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for &str { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + *other == *self + } +} + +impl PartialOrd for &str { + fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> Option { + other.partial_cmp(self) + } +} + +impl PartialEq for Bytes { + fn eq(&self, other: &BytesMut) -> bool { + &other[..] == &self[..] + } +} + +impl PartialEq for BytesMut { + fn eq(&self, other: &Bytes) -> bool { + &other[..] == &self[..] + } +} + +fn vptr(ptr: *mut u8) -> NonNull { + if cfg!(debug_assertions) { + NonNull::new(ptr).expect("Vec pointer should be non-null") + } else { + unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr) } + } +} + +unsafe fn rebuild_vec(ptr: *mut u8, mut len: usize, mut cap: usize, off: usize) -> Vec { + let ptr = ptr.offset(-(off as isize)); + len += off; + cap += off; + + Vec::from_raw_parts(ptr, len, cap) +} + +// ===== impl SharedVtable ===== + +static SHARED_VTABLE: Vtable = Vtable { + clone: shared_v_clone, + drop: shared_v_drop, +}; + +unsafe fn shared_v_clone(data: &AtomicPtr<()>, ptr: *const u8, len: usize) -> Bytes { + let shared = data.load(Ordering::Relaxed) as *mut Shared; + increment_shared(shared); + + let data = AtomicPtr::new(shared as _); + Bytes::with_vtable(ptr, len, data, &SHARED_VTABLE) +} + +unsafe fn shared_v_drop(data: &mut AtomicPtr<()>, _ptr: *const u8, _len: usize) { + data.with_mut(|shared| { + release_shared(*shared as *mut Shared); + }); +} + +// compile-fails + +/// ```compile_fail +/// use bytes::BytesMut; +/// #[deny(unused_must_use)] +/// { +/// let mut b1 = BytesMut::from("hello world"); +/// b1.split_to(6); +/// } +/// ``` +fn _split_to_must_use() {} + +/// ```compile_fail +/// use bytes::BytesMut; +/// #[deny(unused_must_use)] +/// { +/// let mut b1 = BytesMut::from("hello world"); +/// b1.split_off(6); +/// } +/// ``` +fn _split_off_must_use() {} + +/// ```compile_fail +/// use bytes::BytesMut; +/// #[deny(unused_must_use)] +/// { +/// let mut b1 = BytesMut::from("hello world"); +/// b1.split(); +/// } +/// ``` +fn _split_must_use() {} + +// fuzz tests +#[cfg(all(test, loom))] +mod fuzz { + use loom::sync::Arc; + use loom::thread; + + use super::BytesMut; + use crate::Bytes; + + #[test] + fn bytes_mut_cloning_frozen() { + loom::model(|| { + let a = BytesMut::from(&b"abcdefgh"[..]).split().freeze(); + let addr = a.as_ptr() as usize; + + // test the Bytes::clone is Sync by putting it in an Arc + let a1 = Arc::new(a); + let a2 = a1.clone(); + + let t1 = thread::spawn(move || { + let b: Bytes = (*a1).clone(); + assert_eq!(b.as_ptr() as usize, addr); + }); + + let t2 = thread::spawn(move || { + let b: Bytes = (*a2).clone(); + assert_eq!(b.as_ptr() as usize, addr); + }); + + t1.join().unwrap(); + t2.join().unwrap(); + }); + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/debug.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/debug.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a8545514e --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/debug.rs @@ -0,0 +1,49 @@ +use core::fmt::{Debug, Formatter, Result}; + +use super::BytesRef; +use crate::{Bytes, BytesMut}; + +/// Alternative implementation of `std::fmt::Debug` for byte slice. +/// +/// Standard `Debug` implementation for `[u8]` is comma separated +/// list of numbers. Since large amount of byte strings are in fact +/// ASCII strings or contain a lot of ASCII strings (e. g. HTTP), +/// it is convenient to print strings as ASCII when possible. +impl Debug for BytesRef<'_> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + write!(f, "b\"")?; + for &b in self.0 { + // https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/tokens.html#byte-escapes + if b == b'\n' { + write!(f, "\\n")?; + } else if b == b'\r' { + write!(f, "\\r")?; + } else if b == b'\t' { + write!(f, "\\t")?; + } else if b == b'\\' || b == b'"' { + write!(f, "\\{}", b as char)?; + } else if b == b'\0' { + write!(f, "\\0")?; + // ASCII printable + } else if b >= 0x20 && b < 0x7f { + write!(f, "{}", b as char)?; + } else { + write!(f, "\\x{:02x}", b)?; + } + } + write!(f, "\"")?; + Ok(()) + } +} + +impl Debug for Bytes { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + Debug::fmt(&BytesRef(&self.as_ref()), f) + } +} + +impl Debug for BytesMut { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + Debug::fmt(&BytesRef(&self.as_ref()), f) + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/hex.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/hex.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..97a749a33 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/hex.rs @@ -0,0 +1,37 @@ +use core::fmt::{Formatter, LowerHex, Result, UpperHex}; + +use super::BytesRef; +use crate::{Bytes, BytesMut}; + +impl LowerHex for BytesRef<'_> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + for &b in self.0 { + write!(f, "{:02x}", b)?; + } + Ok(()) + } +} + +impl UpperHex for BytesRef<'_> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + for &b in self.0 { + write!(f, "{:02X}", b)?; + } + Ok(()) + } +} + +macro_rules! hex_impl { + ($tr:ident, $ty:ty) => { + impl $tr for $ty { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result { + $tr::fmt(&BytesRef(self.as_ref()), f) + } + } + }; +} + +hex_impl!(LowerHex, Bytes); +hex_impl!(LowerHex, BytesMut); +hex_impl!(UpperHex, Bytes); +hex_impl!(UpperHex, BytesMut); diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/mod.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/mod.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..676d15fc2 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/fmt/mod.rs @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +mod debug; +mod hex; + +/// `BytesRef` is not a part of public API of bytes crate. +struct BytesRef<'a>(&'a [u8]); diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/lib.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/lib.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dd8cc9661 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/lib.rs @@ -0,0 +1,117 @@ +#![warn(missing_docs, missing_debug_implementations, rust_2018_idioms)] +#![doc(test( + no_crate_inject, + attr(deny(warnings, rust_2018_idioms), allow(dead_code, unused_variables)) +))] +#![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/bytes/1.0.1")] +#![no_std] + +//! Provides abstractions for working with bytes. +//! +//! The `bytes` crate provides an efficient byte buffer structure +//! ([`Bytes`](struct.Bytes.html)) and traits for working with buffer +//! implementations ([`Buf`], [`BufMut`]). +//! +//! [`Buf`]: trait.Buf.html +//! [`BufMut`]: trait.BufMut.html +//! +//! # `Bytes` +//! +//! `Bytes` is an efficient container for storing and operating on contiguous +//! slices of memory. It is intended for use primarily in networking code, but +//! could have applications elsewhere as well. +//! +//! `Bytes` values facilitate zero-copy network programming by allowing multiple +//! `Bytes` objects to point to the same underlying memory. This is managed by +//! using a reference count to track when the memory is no longer needed and can +//! be freed. +//! +//! A `Bytes` handle can be created directly from an existing byte store (such as `&[u8]` +//! or `Vec`), but usually a `BytesMut` is used first and written to. For +//! example: +//! +//! ```rust +//! use bytes::{BytesMut, BufMut}; +//! +//! let mut buf = BytesMut::with_capacity(1024); +//! buf.put(&b"hello world"[..]); +//! buf.put_u16(1234); +//! +//! let a = buf.split(); +//! assert_eq!(a, b"hello world\x04\xD2"[..]); +//! +//! buf.put(&b"goodbye world"[..]); +//! +//! let b = buf.split(); +//! assert_eq!(b, b"goodbye world"[..]); +//! +//! assert_eq!(buf.capacity(), 998); +//! ``` +//! +//! In the above example, only a single buffer of 1024 is allocated. The handles +//! `a` and `b` will share the underlying buffer and maintain indices tracking +//! the view into the buffer represented by the handle. +//! +//! See the [struct docs] for more details. +//! +//! [struct docs]: struct.Bytes.html +//! +//! # `Buf`, `BufMut` +//! +//! These two traits provide read and write access to buffers. The underlying +//! storage may or may not be in contiguous memory. For example, `Bytes` is a +//! buffer that guarantees contiguous memory, but a [rope] stores the bytes in +//! disjoint chunks. `Buf` and `BufMut` maintain cursors tracking the current +//! position in the underlying byte storage. When bytes are read or written, the +//! cursor is advanced. +//! +//! [rope]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_(data_structure) +//! +//! ## Relation with `Read` and `Write` +//! +//! At first glance, it may seem that `Buf` and `BufMut` overlap in +//! functionality with `std::io::Read` and `std::io::Write`. However, they +//! serve different purposes. A buffer is the value that is provided as an +//! argument to `Read::read` and `Write::write`. `Read` and `Write` may then +//! perform a syscall, which has the potential of failing. Operations on `Buf` +//! and `BufMut` are infallible. + +extern crate alloc; + +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +extern crate std; + +pub mod buf; +pub use crate::buf::{Buf, BufMut}; + +mod bytes; +mod bytes_mut; +mod fmt; +mod loom; +pub use crate::bytes::Bytes; +pub use crate::bytes_mut::BytesMut; + +// Optional Serde support +#[cfg(feature = "serde")] +mod serde; + +#[inline(never)] +#[cold] +fn abort() -> ! { + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + { + std::process::abort(); + } + + #[cfg(not(feature = "std"))] + { + struct Abort; + impl Drop for Abort { + fn drop(&mut self) { + panic!(); + } + } + let _a = Abort; + panic!("abort"); + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/loom.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/loom.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1cae8812e --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/loom.rs @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +#[cfg(not(all(test, loom)))] +pub(crate) mod sync { + pub(crate) mod atomic { + pub(crate) use core::sync::atomic::{fence, AtomicPtr, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; + + pub(crate) trait AtomicMut { + fn with_mut(&mut self, f: F) -> R + where + F: FnOnce(&mut *mut T) -> R; + } + + impl AtomicMut for AtomicPtr { + fn with_mut(&mut self, f: F) -> R + where + F: FnOnce(&mut *mut T) -> R, + { + f(self.get_mut()) + } + } + } +} + +#[cfg(all(test, loom))] +pub(crate) mod sync { + pub(crate) mod atomic { + pub(crate) use loom::sync::atomic::{fence, AtomicPtr, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; + + pub(crate) trait AtomicMut {} + } +} diff --git a/vendor/bytes/src/serde.rs b/vendor/bytes/src/serde.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0a5bd144a --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/bytes/src/serde.rs @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +use super::{Bytes, BytesMut}; +use alloc::string::String; +use alloc::vec::Vec; +use core::{cmp, fmt}; +use serde::{de, Deserialize, Deserializer, Serialize, Serializer}; + +macro_rules! serde_impl { + ($ty:ident, $visitor_ty:ident, $from_slice:ident, $from_vec:ident) => { + impl Serialize for $ty { + #[inline] + fn serialize(&self, serializer: S) -> Result + where + S: Serializer, + { + serializer.serialize_bytes(&self) + } + } + + struct $visitor_ty; + + impl<'de> de::Visitor<'de> for $visitor_ty { + type Value = $ty; + + fn expecting(&self, formatter: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + formatter.write_str("byte array") + } + + #[inline] + fn visit_seq(self, mut seq: V) -> Result + where + V: de::SeqAccess<'de>, + { + let len = cmp::min(seq.size_hint().unwrap_or(0), 4096); + let mut values: Vec = Vec::with_capacity(len); + + while let Some(value) = seq.next_element()? { + values.push(value); + } + + Ok($ty::$from_vec(values)) + } + + #[inline] + fn visit_bytes(self, v: &[u8]) -> Result + where + E: de::Error, + { + Ok($ty::$from_slice(v)) + } + + #[inline] + fn visit_byte_buf(self, v: Vec) -> Result + where + E: de::Error, + { + Ok($ty::$from_vec(v)) + } + + #[inline] + fn visit_str(self, v: &str) -> Result + where + E: de::Error, + { + Ok($ty::$from_slice(v.as_bytes())) + } + + #[inline] + fn visit_string(self, v: String) -> Result + where + E: de::Error, + { + Ok($ty::$from_vec(v.into_bytes())) + } + } + + impl<'de> Deserialize<'de> for $ty { + #[inline] + fn deserialize(deserializer: D) -> Result<$ty, D::Error> + where + D: Deserializer<'de>, + { + deserializer.deserialize_byte_buf($visitor_ty) + } + } + }; +} + +serde_impl!(Bytes, BytesVisitor, copy_from_slice, from); +serde_impl!(BytesMut, BytesMutVisitor, from, from_vec); -- cgit v1.2.3