use std::collections::HashMap; use std::hash::BuildHasher; // Gather all references from a mutable iterator and make sure Miri notices if // using them is dangerous. fn test_all_refs<'a, T: 'a>(dummy: &mut T, iter: impl Iterator) { // Gather all those references. let mut refs: Vec<&mut T> = iter.collect(); // Use them all. Twice, to be sure we got all interleavings. for r in refs.iter_mut() { std::mem::swap(dummy, r); } for r in refs { std::mem::swap(dummy, r); } } fn smoketest_map(mut map: HashMap) { map.insert(0, 0); assert_eq!(map.values().fold(0, |x, y| x+y), 0); let num = 25; for i in 1..num { map.insert(i, i); } assert_eq!(map.values().fold(0, |x, y| x+y), num*(num-1)/2); // check the right things are in the table now // Inserting again replaces the existing entries for i in 0..num { map.insert(i, num-1-i); } assert_eq!(map.values().fold(0, |x, y| x+y), num*(num-1)/2); test_all_refs(&mut 13, map.values_mut()); } fn main() { // hashbrown uses Miri on its own CI; we just do a smoketest here. smoketest_map(HashMap::new()); }