@@ -68,7 +68,38 @@ impl<T: ?Sized + Unsize<U>, U: ?Sized> CoerceUnsized<*const U> for *mut T {}
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#[ unstable( feature = "coerce_unsized" , issue = "27732" ) ]
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impl < T : ?Sized + Unsize < U > , U : ?Sized > CoerceUnsized < * const U > for * const T { }
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- /// This is used for object safety, to check that a method's receiver type can be dispatched on.
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+ /// `DispatchFromDyn` is used in the implementation of object safety checks (specifically allowing
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+ /// arbitrary self types), to guarantee that a method's receiver type can be dispatched on.
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+ ///
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+ /// Note: `DispatchFromDyn` was briefly named `CoerceSized` (and had a slightly different
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+ /// interpretation).
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+ ///
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+ /// Imagine we have a trait object `t` with type `&dyn Tr`, where `Tr` is some trait with a method
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+ /// `m` defined as `fn m(&self);`. When calling `t.m()`, the receiver `t` is a wide pointer, but an
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+ /// implementation of `m` will expect a narrow pointer as `&self` (a reference to the concrete
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+ /// type). The compiler must generate an implicit conversion from the trait object/wide pointer to
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+ /// the concrete reference/narrow pointer. Implementing `DispatchFromDyn` indicates that that
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+ /// conversion is allowed and thus that the type implementing `DispatchFromDyn` is safe to use as
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+ /// the self type in an object-safe method. (in the above example, the compiler will require
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+ /// `DispatchFromDyn` is implemented for `&'a U`).
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+ ///
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+ /// `DispatchFromDyn` does not specify the conversion from wide pointer to narrow pointer; the
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+ /// conversion is hard-wired into the compiler. For the conversion to work, the following
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+ /// properties must hold (i.e., it is only safe to implement `DispatchFromDyn` for types which have
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+ /// these properties, these are also checked by the compiler):
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+ ///
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+ /// * EITHER `Self` and `T` are either both references or both raw pointers; in either case, with
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+ /// the same mutability.
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+ /// * OR, all of the following hold
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+ /// - `Self` and `T` must have the same type constructor, and only vary in a single type parameter
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+ /// formal (the *coerced type*, e.g., `impl DispatchFromDyn<Rc<T>> for Rc<U>` is ok and the
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+ /// single type parameter (instantiated with `T` or `U`) is the coerced type,
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+ /// `impl DispatchFromDyn<Arc<T>> for Rc<U>` is not ok).
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+ /// - The definition for `Self` must be a struct.
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+ /// - The definition for `Self` must not be `#[repr(packed)]` or `#[repr(C)]`.
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+ /// - Other than one-aligned, zero-sized fields, the definition for `Self` must have exactly one
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+ /// field and that field's type must be the coerced type. Furthermore, `Self`'s field type must
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+ /// implement `DispatchFromDyn<F>` where `F` is the type of `T`'s field type.
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///
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/// An example implementation of the trait:
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///
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