rust/src/test/ui/span/issue-25199.rs

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// Regression test for Issue 25199: Check that one cannot hide a
// destructor's access to borrowed data behind a boxed trait object.
//
// Prior to fixing Issue 25199, this example was able to be compiled
// with rustc, and thus when you ran it, you would see the `Drop` impl
// for `Test` accessing state that had already been dropping (which is
// marked explicitly here with checking code within the `Drop` impl
// for `VecHolder`, but in the general case could just do unsound
// things like accessing memory that has been freed).
//
// Note that I would have liked to encode my go-to example of cyclic
// structure that accesses its neighbors in drop (and thus is
// fundamentally unsound) via this trick, but the closest I was able
// to come was dropck_trait_cycle_checked.rs, which is not quite as
// "good" as this regression test because the encoding of that example
// was forced to attach a lifetime to the trait definition itself
// (`trait Obj<'a>`) while *this* example is solely
use std::cell::RefCell;
trait Obj { }
struct VecHolder {
v: Vec<(bool, &'static str)>,
}
impl Drop for VecHolder {
fn drop(&mut self) {
println!("Dropping Vec");
self.v[30].0 = false;
self.v[30].1 = "invalid access: VecHolder dropped already";
}
}
struct Container<'a> {
v: VecHolder,
d: RefCell<Vec<Box<Obj+'a>>>,
}
impl<'a> Container<'a> {
fn new() -> Container<'a> {
Container {
d: RefCell::new(Vec::new()),
v: VecHolder {
v: vec![(true, "valid"); 100]
}
}
}
fn store<T: Obj+'a>(&'a self, val: T) {
self.d.borrow_mut().push(Box::new(val));
}
}
struct Test<'a> {
test: &'a Container<'a>,
}
impl<'a> Obj for Test<'a> { }
impl<'a> Drop for Test<'a> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
for e in &self.test.v.v {
assert!(e.0, e.1);
}
}
}
fn main() {
let container = Container::new();
let test = Test{test: &container};
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//~^ ERROR `container` does not live long enough
println!("container.v[30]: {:?}", container.v.v[30]);
container.store(test);
}