// compile-flags: -Zmiri-strict-provenance fn empty() -> &'static str { "" } fn hello() -> &'static str { "Hello, world!" } fn hello_bytes() -> &'static [u8; 13] { b"Hello, world!" } fn hello_bytes_fat() -> &'static [u8] { b"Hello, world!" } fn fat_pointer_on_32_bit() { Some(5).expect("foo"); } fn str_indexing() { let mut x = "Hello".to_string(); let _v = &mut x[..3]; // Test IndexMut on String. } fn unique_aliasing() { // This is a regression test for the aliasing rules of a `Unique` pointer. // At the time of writing this test case, Miri does not treat `Unique` // pointers as a special case, these are treated like any other raw pointer. // However, there are existing Github issues which may lead to `Unique` // becoming a special case through asserting unique ownership over the pointee: // - https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/258 // - https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/262 // Below, the calls to `String::remove` and `String::insert[_str]` follow // code paths that would trigger undefined behavior in case `Unique` // would ever assert semantic ownership over the pointee. Internally, // these methods call `self.vec.as_ptr()` and `self.vec.as_mut_ptr()` on // the vector of bytes that are backing the `String`. That `Vec` holds a // `Unique` internally. The second call to `Vec::as_mut_ptr(&mut self)` // would then invalidate the pointers derived from `Vec::as_ptr(&self)`. // Note that as long as `Unique` is treated like any other raw pointer, // this test case should pass. It is merely here as a canary test for // potential future undefined behavior. let mut x = String::from("Hello"); assert_eq!(x.remove(0), 'H'); x.insert(0, 'H'); assert_eq!(x, "Hello"); x.insert_str(x.len(), ", world!"); assert_eq!(x, "Hello, world!"); } fn main() { assert_eq!(empty(), ""); assert_eq!(hello(), "Hello, world!"); assert_eq!(hello_bytes(), b"Hello, world!"); assert_eq!(hello_bytes_fat(), b"Hello, world!"); fat_pointer_on_32_bit(); // Should run without crashing. str_indexing(); unique_aliasing(); }