// Copyright 2015 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. // Demonstrate the use of the unguarded escape hatch with a trait bound // to assert that destructor will not access any dead data. // // Compare with compile-fail/issue28498-reject-trait-bound.rs #![feature(dropck_parametricity)] use std::fmt; #[derive(Debug)] struct ScribbleOnDrop(String); impl Drop for ScribbleOnDrop { fn drop(&mut self) { self.0 = format!("DROPPED"); } } struct Foo(u32, T); impl Drop for Foo { #[unsafe_destructor_blind_to_params] fn drop(&mut self) { // Use of `unsafe_destructor_blind_to_params` is sound, // because destructor never accesses the `Debug::fmt` method // of `T`, despite having it available. println!("Dropping Foo({}, _)", self.0); } } fn main() { let (last_dropped, foo0); let (foo1, first_dropped); last_dropped = ScribbleOnDrop(format!("last")); first_dropped = ScribbleOnDrop(format!("first")); foo0 = Foo(0, &last_dropped); foo1 = Foo(1, &first_dropped); println!("foo0.1: {:?} foo1.1: {:?}", foo0.1, foo1.1); }