//! OS-based thread local storage //! //! This module provides an implementation of OS-based thread local storage, //! using the native OS-provided facilities (think `TlsAlloc` or //! `pthread_setspecific`). The interface of this differs from the other types //! of thread-local-storage provided in this crate in that OS-based TLS can only //! get/set pointer-sized data, possibly with an associated destructor. //! //! This module also provides two flavors of TLS. One is intended for static //! initialization, and does not contain a `Drop` implementation to deallocate //! the OS-TLS key. The other is a type which does implement `Drop` and hence //! has a safe interface. //! //! # Usage //! //! This module should likely not be used directly unless other primitives are //! being built on. Types such as `thread_local::spawn::Key` are likely much //! more useful in practice than this OS-based version which likely requires //! unsafe code to interoperate with. //! //! # Examples //! //! Using a dynamically allocated TLS key. Note that this key can be shared //! among many threads via an `Arc`. //! //! ```ignore (cannot-doctest-private-modules) //! let key = Key::new(None); //! assert!(key.get().is_null()); //! key.set(1 as *mut u8); //! assert!(!key.get().is_null()); //! //! drop(key); // deallocate this TLS slot. //! ``` //! //! Sometimes a statically allocated key is either required or easier to work //! with, however. //! //! ```ignore (cannot-doctest-private-modules) //! static KEY: StaticKey = INIT; //! //! unsafe { //! assert!(KEY.get().is_null()); //! KEY.set(1 as *mut u8); //! } //! ``` #![allow(non_camel_case_types)] #![unstable(feature = "thread_local_internals", issue = "none")] #![allow(dead_code)] #[cfg(test)] mod tests; use crate::sync::atomic::{self, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; use crate::sys::thread_local_key as imp; /// A type for TLS keys that are statically allocated. /// /// This type is entirely `unsafe` to use as it does not protect against /// use-after-deallocation or use-during-deallocation. /// /// The actual OS-TLS key is lazily allocated when this is used for the first /// time. The key is also deallocated when the Rust runtime exits or `destroy` /// is called, whichever comes first. /// /// # Examples /// /// ```ignore (cannot-doctest-private-modules) /// use tls::os::{StaticKey, INIT}; /// /// // Use a regular global static to store the key. /// static KEY: StaticKey = INIT; /// /// // The state provided via `get` and `set` is thread-local. /// unsafe { /// assert!(KEY.get().is_null()); /// KEY.set(1 as *mut u8); /// } /// ``` pub struct StaticKey { /// Inner static TLS key (internals). key: AtomicUsize, /// Destructor for the TLS value. /// /// See `Key::new` for information about when the destructor runs and how /// it runs. dtor: Option, } /// A type for a safely managed OS-based TLS slot. /// /// This type allocates an OS TLS key when it is initialized and will deallocate /// the key when it falls out of scope. When compared with `StaticKey`, this /// type is entirely safe to use. /// /// Implementations will likely, however, contain unsafe code as this type only /// operates on `*mut u8`, a raw pointer. /// /// # Examples /// /// ```ignore (cannot-doctest-private-modules) /// use tls::os::Key; /// /// let key = Key::new(None); /// assert!(key.get().is_null()); /// key.set(1 as *mut u8); /// assert!(!key.get().is_null()); /// /// drop(key); // deallocate this TLS slot. /// ``` pub struct Key { key: imp::Key, } /// Constant initialization value for static TLS keys. /// /// This value specifies no destructor by default. pub const INIT: StaticKey = StaticKey::new(None); // Define a sentinel value that is unlikely to be returned // as a TLS key (but it may be returned). const KEY_SENTVAL: usize = 0; impl StaticKey { #[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "thread_local_internals", issue = "none")] pub const fn new(dtor: Option) -> StaticKey { StaticKey { key: atomic::AtomicUsize::new(KEY_SENTVAL), dtor } } /// Gets the value associated with this TLS key /// /// This will lazily allocate a TLS key from the OS if one has not already /// been allocated. #[inline] pub unsafe fn get(&self) -> *mut u8 { imp::get(self.key()) } /// Sets this TLS key to a new value. /// /// This will lazily allocate a TLS key from the OS if one has not already /// been allocated. #[inline] pub unsafe fn set(&self, val: *mut u8) { imp::set(self.key(), val) } #[inline] unsafe fn key(&self) -> imp::Key { match self.key.load(Ordering::Relaxed) { KEY_SENTVAL => self.lazy_init() as imp::Key, n => n as imp::Key, } } unsafe fn lazy_init(&self) -> usize { // POSIX allows the key created here to be KEY_SENTVAL, but the compare_exchange // below relies on using KEY_SENTVAL as a sentinel value to check who won the // race to set the shared TLS key. As far as I know, there is no // guaranteed value that cannot be returned as a posix_key_create key, // so there is no value we can initialize the inner key with to // prove that it has not yet been set. As such, we'll continue using a // value of KEY_SENTVAL, but with some gyrations to make sure we have a non-KEY_SENTVAL // value returned from the creation routine. // FIXME: this is clearly a hack, and should be cleaned up. let key1 = imp::create(self.dtor); let key = if key1 as usize != KEY_SENTVAL { key1 } else { let key2 = imp::create(self.dtor); imp::destroy(key1); key2 }; rtassert!(key as usize != KEY_SENTVAL); match self.key.compare_exchange( KEY_SENTVAL, key as usize, Ordering::SeqCst, Ordering::SeqCst, ) { // The CAS succeeded, so we've created the actual key Ok(_) => key as usize, // If someone beat us to the punch, use their key instead Err(n) => { imp::destroy(key); n } } } } impl Key { /// Creates a new managed OS TLS key. /// /// This key will be deallocated when the key falls out of scope. /// /// The argument provided is an optionally-specified destructor for the /// value of this TLS key. When a thread exits and the value for this key /// is non-null the destructor will be invoked. The TLS value will be reset /// to null before the destructor is invoked. /// /// Note that the destructor will not be run when the `Key` goes out of /// scope. #[inline] pub fn new(dtor: Option) -> Key { Key { key: unsafe { imp::create(dtor) } } } /// See StaticKey::get #[inline] pub fn get(&self) -> *mut u8 { unsafe { imp::get(self.key) } } /// See StaticKey::set #[inline] pub fn set(&self, val: *mut u8) { unsafe { imp::set(self.key, val) } } } impl Drop for Key { fn drop(&mut self) { unsafe { imp::destroy(self.key) } } }