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// This file is part of ICU4X. For terms of use, please see the file
// called LICENSE at the top level of the ICU4X source tree
use crate::cartable_ptr::{CartableOptionPointer, CartablePointerLike};
use crate::either::EitherCart;
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
use crate::erased::{ErasedArcCart, ErasedBoxCart, ErasedRcCart};
use crate::kinda_sorta_dangling::KindaSortaDangling;
use crate::trait_hack::YokeTraitHack;
use crate::Yokeable;
use core::marker::PhantomData;
use core::ops::Deref;
use stable_deref_trait::StableDeref;
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
use alloc::boxed::Box;
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
use alloc::rc::Rc;
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
use alloc::sync::Arc;
/// A Cow-like borrowed object "yoked" to its backing data.
///
/// This allows things like zero copy deserialized data to carry around
/// shared references to their backing buffer, by "erasing" their static lifetime
/// and turning it into a dynamically managed one.
///
/// `Y` (the [`Yokeable`]) is the object containing the references,
/// and will typically be of the form `Foo<'static>`. The `'static` is
/// not the actual lifetime of the data, rather it is a convenient way to mark the
/// erased lifetime and make it dynamic.
///
/// `C` is the "cart", which `Y` may contain references to. After the yoke is constructed,
/// the cart serves little purpose except to guarantee that `Y`'s references remain valid
/// for as long as the yoke remains in memory (by calling the destructor at the appropriate moment).
///
/// The primary constructor for [`Yoke`] is [`Yoke::attach_to_cart()`]. Several variants of that
/// constructor are provided to serve numerous types of call sites and `Yoke` signatures.
///
/// The key behind this type is [`Yoke::get()`], where calling [`.get()`][Yoke::get] on a type like
/// `Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, _>` will get you a short-lived `&'a Cow<'a, str>`, restricted to the
/// lifetime of the borrow used during `.get()`. This is entirely safe since the `Cow` borrows from
/// the cart type `C`, which cannot be interfered with as long as the `Yoke` is borrowed by `.get
/// ()`. `.get()` protects access by essentially reifying the erased lifetime to a safe local one
/// when necessary.
///
/// Furthermore, there are various [`.map_project()`][Yoke::map_project] methods that allow turning a `Yoke`
/// into another `Yoke` containing a different type that may contain elements of the original yoked
/// value. See the [`Yoke::map_project()`] docs for more details.
///
/// In general, `C` is a concrete type, but it is also possible for it to be a trait object.
///
/// # Example
///
/// For example, we can use this to store zero-copy deserialized data in a cache:
///
/// ```rust
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # fn load_from_cache(_filename: &str) -> Rc<[u8]> {
/// # // dummy implementation
/// # Rc::new([0x5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f])
/// # }
///
/// fn load_object(filename: &str) -> Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// let rc: Rc<[u8]> = load_from_cache(filename);
/// Yoke::<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>::attach_to_cart(rc, |data: &[u8]| {
/// // essentially forcing a #[serde(borrow)]
/// Cow::Borrowed(bincode::deserialize(data).unwrap())
/// })
/// }
///
/// let yoke = load_object("filename.bincode");
/// assert_eq!(&**yoke.get(), "hello");
/// assert!(matches!(yoke.get(), &Cow::Borrowed(_)));
/// ```
pub struct Yoke<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> {
// must be the first field for drop order
// this will have a 'static lifetime parameter, that parameter is a lie
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling<Y>,
// Safety invariant: this type can be anything, but `yokeable` may only contain references to
// StableDeref parts of this cart, and those references must be valid for the lifetime of
// this cart (it must own or borrow them). It's ok for this cart to contain stack data as long as it
// is not referenced by `yokeable` during construction. `attach_to_cart`, the typical constructor
// of this type, upholds this invariant, but other constructors like `replace_cart` need to uphold it.
cart: C,
}
// Manual `Debug` implementation, since the derived one would be unsound.
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: core::fmt::Debug> core::fmt::Debug for Yoke<Y, C>
where
for<'a> <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output: core::fmt::Debug,
{
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut core::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> core::fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Yoke")
.field("yokeable", self.get())
.field("cart", self.backing_cart())
.finish()
}
}
#[test]
fn test_debug() {
let local_data = "foo".to_owned();
let y1 = Yoke::<alloc::borrow::Cow<'static, str>, Rc<String>>::attach_to_zero_copy_cart(
Rc::new(local_data),
);
assert_eq!(
format!("{y1:?}"),
r#"Yoke { yokeable: "foo", cart: "foo" }"#,
);
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: StableDeref> Yoke<Y, C>
where
<C as Deref>::Target: 'static,
{
/// Construct a [`Yoke`] by yokeing an object to a cart in a closure.
///
/// The closure can read and write data outside of its scope, but data it returns
/// may borrow only from the argument passed to the closure.
///
/// See also [`Yoke::try_attach_to_cart()`] to return a `Result` from the closure.
///
/// Call sites for this function may not compile pre-1.61; if this still happens, use
/// [`Yoke::attach_to_cart_badly()`] and file a bug.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # fn load_from_cache(_filename: &str) -> Rc<[u8]> {
/// # // dummy implementation
/// # Rc::new([0x5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f])
/// # }
///
/// fn load_object(filename: &str) -> Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// let rc: Rc<[u8]> = load_from_cache(filename);
/// Yoke::<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>::attach_to_cart(rc, |data: &[u8]| {
/// // essentially forcing a #[serde(borrow)]
/// Cow::Borrowed(bincode::deserialize(data).unwrap())
/// })
/// }
///
/// let yoke: Yoke<Cow<str>, _> = load_object("filename.bincode");
/// assert_eq!(&**yoke.get(), "hello");
/// assert!(matches!(yoke.get(), &Cow::Borrowed(_)));
/// ```
///
/// Write the number of consumed bytes to a local variable:
///
/// ```
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # fn load_from_cache(_filename: &str) -> Rc<[u8]> {
/// # // dummy implementation
/// # Rc::new([0x5, 0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f, 0, 0, 0])
/// # }
///
/// fn load_object(
/// filename: &str,
/// ) -> (Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>, usize) {
/// let rc: Rc<[u8]> = load_from_cache(filename);
/// let mut bytes_remaining = 0;
/// let bytes_remaining = &mut bytes_remaining;
/// let yoke = Yoke::<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>::attach_to_cart(
/// rc,
/// |data: &[u8]| {
/// let mut d = postcard::Deserializer::from_bytes(data);
/// let output = serde::Deserialize::deserialize(&mut d);
/// *bytes_remaining = d.finalize().unwrap().len();
/// Cow::Borrowed(output.unwrap())
/// },
/// );
/// (yoke, *bytes_remaining)
/// }
///
/// let (yoke, bytes_remaining) = load_object("filename.postcard");
/// assert_eq!(&**yoke.get(), "hello");
/// assert!(matches!(yoke.get(), &Cow::Borrowed(_)));
/// assert_eq!(bytes_remaining, 3);
/// ```
pub fn attach_to_cart<F>(cart: C, f: F) -> Self
where
// safety note: This works by enforcing that the *only* place the return value of F
// can borrow from is the cart, since `F` must be valid for all lifetimes `'de`
//
// The <C as Deref>::Target: 'static on the impl is crucial for safety as well
//
// See safety docs at the bottom of this file for more information
F: for<'de> FnOnce(&'de <C as Deref>::Target) -> <Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output,
<C as Deref>::Target: 'static,
{
let deserialized = f(cart.deref());
Self {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { Y::make(deserialized) }),
cart,
}
}
/// Construct a [`Yoke`] by yokeing an object to a cart. If an error occurs in the
/// deserializer function, the error is passed up to the caller.
///
/// Call sites for this function may not compile pre-1.61; if this still happens, use
/// [`Yoke::try_attach_to_cart_badly()`] and file a bug.
pub fn try_attach_to_cart<E, F>(cart: C, f: F) -> Result<Self, E>
where
F: for<'de> FnOnce(&'de <C as Deref>::Target) -> Result<<Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output, E>,
{
let deserialized = f(cart.deref())?;
Ok(Self {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { Y::make(deserialized) }),
cart,
})
}
/// Use [`Yoke::attach_to_cart()`].
///
/// This was needed because the pre-1.61 compiler couldn't always handle the FnOnce trait bound.
#[deprecated]
pub fn attach_to_cart_badly(
cart: C,
f: for<'de> fn(&'de <C as Deref>::Target) -> <Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output,
) -> Self {
Self::attach_to_cart(cart, f)
}
/// Use [`Yoke::try_attach_to_cart()`].
///
/// This was needed because the pre-1.61 compiler couldn't always handle the FnOnce trait bound.
#[deprecated]
pub fn try_attach_to_cart_badly<E>(
cart: C,
f: for<'de> fn(&'de <C as Deref>::Target) -> Result<<Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output, E>,
) -> Result<Self, E> {
Self::try_attach_to_cart(cart, f)
}
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> Yoke<Y, C> {
/// Obtain a valid reference to the yokeable data
///
/// This essentially transforms the lifetime of the internal yokeable data to
/// be valid.
/// For example, if you're working with a `Yoke<Cow<'static, T>, C>`, this
/// will return an `&'a Cow<'a, T>`
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # fn load_from_cache(_filename: &str) -> Rc<[u8]> {
/// # // dummy implementation
/// # Rc::new([0x5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f])
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn load_object(filename: &str) -> Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// # let rc: Rc<[u8]> = load_from_cache(filename);
/// # Yoke::<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>::attach_to_cart(rc, |data: &[u8]| {
/// # Cow::Borrowed(bincode::deserialize(data).unwrap())
/// # })
/// # }
///
/// // load_object() defined in the example at the top of this page
/// let yoke: Yoke<Cow<str>, _> = load_object("filename.bincode");
/// assert_eq!(yoke.get(), "hello");
/// ```
#[inline]
pub fn get<'a>(&'a self) -> &'a <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output {
self.yokeable.transform()
}
/// Get a reference to the backing cart.
///
/// This can be useful when building caches, etc. However, if you plan to store the cart
/// separately from the yoke, read the note of caution below in [`Yoke::into_backing_cart`].
pub fn backing_cart(&self) -> &C {
&self.cart
}
/// Get the backing cart by value, dropping the yokeable object.
///
/// **Caution:** Calling this method could cause information saved in the yokeable object but
/// not the cart to be lost. Use this method only if the yokeable object cannot contain its
/// own information.
///
/// # Example
///
/// Good example: the yokeable object is only a reference, so no information can be lost.
///
/// ```
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let local_data = "foo".to_owned();
/// let yoke = Yoke::<&'static str, Box<String>>::attach_to_zero_copy_cart(
/// Box::new(local_data),
/// );
/// assert_eq!(*yoke.get(), "foo");
///
/// // Get back the cart
/// let cart = yoke.into_backing_cart();
/// assert_eq!(&*cart, "foo");
/// ```
///
/// Bad example: information specified in `.with_mut()` is lost.
///
/// ```
/// use std::borrow::Cow;
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let local_data = "foo".to_owned();
/// let mut yoke =
/// Yoke::<Cow<'static, str>, Box<String>>::attach_to_zero_copy_cart(
/// Box::new(local_data),
/// );
/// assert_eq!(yoke.get(), "foo");
///
/// // Override data in the cart
/// yoke.with_mut(|cow| {
/// let mut_str = cow.to_mut();
/// mut_str.clear();
/// mut_str.push_str("bar");
/// });
/// assert_eq!(yoke.get(), "bar");
///
/// // Get back the cart
/// let cart = yoke.into_backing_cart();
/// assert_eq!(&*cart, "foo"); // WHOOPS!
/// ```
pub fn into_backing_cart(self) -> C {
self.cart
}
/// Unsafe function for replacing the cart with another
///
/// This can be used for type-erasing the cart, for example.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// - `f()` must not panic
/// - References from the yokeable `Y` should still be valid for the lifetime of the
/// returned cart type `C`.
///
/// For the purpose of determining this, `Yoke` guarantees that references from the Yokeable
/// `Y` into the cart `C` will never be references into its stack data, only heap data protected
/// by `StableDeref`. This does not necessarily mean that `C` implements `StableDeref`, rather that
/// any data referenced by `Y` must be accessed through a `StableDeref` impl on something `C` owns.
///
/// Concretely, this means that if `C = Option<Rc<T>>`, `Y` may contain references to the `T` but not
/// anything else.
/// - Lifetimes inside C must not be lengthened, even if they are themselves contravariant.
/// I.e., if C contains an `fn(&'a u8)`, it cannot be replaced with `fn(&'static u8),
/// even though that is typically safe.
///
/// Typically, this means implementing `f` as something which _wraps_ the inner cart type `C`.
/// `Yoke` only really cares about destructors for its carts so it's fine to erase other
/// information about the cart, as long as the backing data will still be destroyed at the
/// same time.
#[inline]
pub unsafe fn replace_cart<C2>(self, f: impl FnOnce(C) -> C2) -> Yoke<Y, C2> {
Yoke {
yokeable: self.yokeable,
cart: f(self.cart),
}
}
/// Mutate the stored [`Yokeable`] data.
///
/// See [`Yokeable::transform_mut()`] for why this operation is safe.
///
/// # Example
///
/// This can be used to partially mutate the stored data, provided
/// no _new_ borrowed data is introduced.
///
/// ```rust
/// # use yoke::{Yoke, Yokeable};
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # use std::mem;
/// # fn load_from_cache(_filename: &str) -> Rc<[u8]> {
/// # // dummy implementation
/// # Rc::new([0x5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f])
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn load_object(filename: &str) -> Yoke<Bar<'static>, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// # let rc: Rc<[u8]> = load_from_cache(filename);
/// # Yoke::<Bar<'static>, Rc<[u8]>>::attach_to_cart(rc, |data: &[u8]| {
/// # // A real implementation would properly deserialize `Bar` as a whole
/// # Bar {
/// # numbers: Cow::Borrowed(bincode::deserialize(data).unwrap()),
/// # string: Cow::Borrowed(bincode::deserialize(data).unwrap()),
/// # owned: Vec::new(),
/// # }
/// # })
/// # }
///
/// // also implements Yokeable
/// struct Bar<'a> {
/// numbers: Cow<'a, [u8]>,
/// string: Cow<'a, str>,
/// owned: Vec<u8>,
/// }
///
/// // `load_object()` deserializes an object from a file
/// let mut bar: Yoke<Bar, _> = load_object("filename.bincode");
/// assert_eq!(bar.get().string, "hello");
/// assert!(matches!(bar.get().string, Cow::Borrowed(_)));
/// assert_eq!(&*bar.get().numbers, &[0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f]);
/// assert!(matches!(bar.get().numbers, Cow::Borrowed(_)));
/// assert_eq!(&*bar.get().owned, &[]);
///
/// bar.with_mut(|bar| {
/// bar.string.to_mut().push_str(" world");
/// bar.owned.extend_from_slice(&[1, 4, 1, 5, 9]);
/// });
///
/// assert_eq!(bar.get().string, "hello world");
/// assert!(matches!(bar.get().string, Cow::Owned(_)));
/// assert_eq!(&*bar.get().owned, &[1, 4, 1, 5, 9]);
/// // Unchanged and still Cow::Borrowed
/// assert_eq!(&*bar.get().numbers, &[0x68, 0x65, 0x6c, 0x6c, 0x6f]);
/// assert!(matches!(bar.get().numbers, Cow::Borrowed(_)));
///
/// # unsafe impl<'a> Yokeable<'a> for Bar<'static> {
/// # type Output = Bar<'a>;
/// # fn transform(&'a self) -> &'a Bar<'a> {
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_owned(self) -> Bar<'a> {
/// # // covariant lifetime cast, can be done safely
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # unsafe fn make(from: Bar<'a>) -> Self {
/// # let ret = mem::transmute_copy(&from);
/// # mem::forget(from);
/// # ret
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_mut<F>(&'a mut self, f: F)
/// # where
/// # F: 'static + FnOnce(&'a mut Self::Output),
/// # {
/// # unsafe { f(mem::transmute(self)) }
/// # }
/// # }
/// ```
pub fn with_mut<'a, F>(&'a mut self, f: F)
where
F: 'static + for<'b> FnOnce(&'b mut <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output),
{
self.yokeable.transform_mut(f)
}
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in an `Option<T>`.
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_option(self) -> Yoke<Y, Option<C>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(Some)
}
}
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>> Yoke<Y, ()> {
/// Construct a new [`Yoke`] from static data. There will be no
/// references to `cart` here since [`Yokeable`]s are `'static`,
/// this is good for e.g. constructing fully owned
/// [`Yoke`]s with no internal borrowing.
///
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::new_owned()`] but it does not allow you to
/// mix the [`Yoke`] with borrowed data. This is primarily useful
/// for using [`Yoke`] in generic scenarios.
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
///
/// let owned: Cow<str> = "hello".to_owned().into();
/// // this yoke can be intermingled with actually-borrowed Yokes
/// let yoke: Yoke<Cow<str>, ()> = Yoke::new_always_owned(owned);
///
/// assert_eq!(yoke.get(), "hello");
/// ```
pub fn new_always_owned(yokeable: Y) -> Self {
Self {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(yokeable),
cart: (),
}
}
/// Obtain the yokeable out of a `Yoke<Y, ()>`
///
/// For most `Yoke` types this would be unsafe but it's
/// fine for `Yoke<Y, ()>` since there are no actual internal
/// references
pub fn into_yokeable(self) -> Y {
self.yokeable.into_inner()
}
}
// C does not need to be StableDeref here, if the yoke was constructed it's valid,
// and new_owned() doesn't construct a yokeable that uses references,
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> Yoke<Y, Option<C>> {
/// Construct a new [`Yoke`] from static data. There will be no
/// references to `cart` here since [`Yokeable`]s are `'static`,
/// this is good for e.g. constructing fully owned
/// [`Yoke`]s with no internal borrowing.
///
/// This can be paired with [`Yoke:: wrap_cart_in_option()`] to mix owned
/// and borrowed data.
///
/// If you do not wish to pair this with borrowed data, [`Yoke::new_always_owned()`] can
/// be used to get a [`Yoke`] API on always-owned data.
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
///
/// let owned: Cow<str> = "hello".to_owned().into();
/// // this yoke can be intermingled with actually-borrowed Yokes
/// let yoke: Yoke<Cow<str>, Option<Rc<[u8]>>> = Yoke::new_owned(owned);
///
/// assert_eq!(yoke.get(), "hello");
/// ```
pub const fn new_owned(yokeable: Y) -> Self {
Self {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(yokeable),
cart: None,
}
}
/// Obtain the yokeable out of a `Yoke<Y, Option<C>>` if possible.
///
/// If the cart is `None`, this returns `Ok`, but if the cart is `Some`,
/// this returns `self` as an error.
pub fn try_into_yokeable(self) -> Result<Y, Self> {
// Safety: if the cart is None there is no way for the yokeable to
// have references into it because of the cart invariant.
match self.cart {
Some(_) => Err(self),
None => Ok(self.yokeable.into_inner()),
}
}
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: CartablePointerLike> Yoke<Y, Option<C>> {
/// Converts a `Yoke<Y, Option<C>>` to `Yoke<Y, CartableOptionPointer<C>>`
/// for better niche optimization when stored as a field.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::borrow::Cow;
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let yoke: Yoke<Cow<[u8]>, Box<Vec<u8>>> =
/// Yoke::attach_to_cart(vec![10, 20, 30].into(), |c| c.into());
///
/// let yoke_option = yoke.wrap_cart_in_option();
/// let yoke_option_pointer = yoke_option.convert_cart_into_option_pointer();
/// ```
///
/// The niche improves stack sizes:
///
/// ```
/// use yoke::Yoke;
/// use yoke::cartable_ptr::CartableOptionPointer;
/// use std::mem::size_of;
/// use std::rc::Rc;
///
/// // The data struct is 6 words:
/// # #[derive(yoke::Yokeable)]
/// # struct MyDataStruct<'a> {
/// # _s: (usize, usize, usize, usize),
/// # _p: &'a str,
/// # }
/// const W: usize = core::mem::size_of::<usize>();
/// assert_eq!(W * 6, size_of::<MyDataStruct>());
///
/// // An enum containing the data struct with an `Option<Rc>` cart is 8 words:
/// enum StaticOrYoke1 {
/// Static(&'static MyDataStruct<'static>),
/// Yoke(Yoke<MyDataStruct<'static>, Option<Rc<String>>>),
/// }
/// assert_eq!(W * 8, size_of::<StaticOrYoke1>());
///
/// // When using `CartableOptionPointer``, we need only 7 words for the same behavior:
/// enum StaticOrYoke2 {
/// Static(&'static MyDataStruct<'static>),
/// Yoke(Yoke<MyDataStruct<'static>, CartableOptionPointer<Rc<String>>>),
/// }
/// assert_eq!(W * 7, size_of::<StaticOrYoke2>());
/// ```
#[inline]
pub fn convert_cart_into_option_pointer(self) -> Yoke<Y, CartableOptionPointer<C>> {
match self.cart {
Some(cart) => Yoke {
yokeable: self.yokeable,
cart: CartableOptionPointer::from_cartable(cart),
},
None => Yoke {
yokeable: self.yokeable,
cart: CartableOptionPointer::none(),
},
}
}
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: CartablePointerLike> Yoke<Y, CartableOptionPointer<C>> {
/// Obtain the yokeable out of a `Yoke<Y, CartableOptionPointer<C>>` if possible.
///
/// If the cart is `None`, this returns `Ok`, but if the cart is `Some`,
/// this returns `self` as an error.
#[inline]
pub fn try_into_yokeable(self) -> Result<Y, Self> {
if self.cart.is_none() {
Ok(self.yokeable.into_inner())
} else {
Err(self)
}
}
}
/// This trait marks cart types that do not change source on cloning
///
/// This is conceptually similar to [`stable_deref_trait::CloneStableDeref`],
/// however [`stable_deref_trait::CloneStableDeref`] is not (and should not) be
/// implemented on [`Option`] (since it's not [`Deref`]). [`CloneableCart`] essentially is
/// "if there _is_ data to borrow from here, cloning the cart gives you an additional
/// handle to the same data".
///
/// # Safety
/// This trait is safe to implement on `StableDeref` types which, once `Clone`d, point to the same underlying data and retain ownership.
///
/// This trait can also be implemented on aggregates of such types like `Option<T: CloneableCart>` and `(T: CloneableCart, U: CloneableCart)`.
///
/// Essentially, all data that could be referenced by a Yokeable (i.e. data that is referenced via a StableDeref) must retain the same
/// pointer and ownership semantics once cloned.
pub unsafe trait CloneableCart: Clone {}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> CloneableCart for Rc<T> {}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
unsafe impl<T: ?Sized> CloneableCart for Arc<T> {}
unsafe impl<T: CloneableCart> CloneableCart for Option<T> {}
unsafe impl<'a, T: ?Sized> CloneableCart for &'a T {}
unsafe impl CloneableCart for () {}
/// Clone requires that the cart type `C` derefs to the same address after it is cloned. This works for
/// Rc, Arc, and &'a T.
///
/// For other cart types, clone `.backing_cart()` and re-use `.attach_to_cart()`; however, doing
/// so may lose mutations performed via `.with_mut()`.
///
/// Cloning a `Yoke` is often a cheap operation requiring no heap allocations, in much the same
/// way that cloning an `Rc` is a cheap operation. However, if the `yokeable` contains owned data
/// (e.g., from `.with_mut()`), that data will need to be cloned.
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: CloneableCart> Clone for Yoke<Y, C>
where
for<'a> YokeTraitHack<<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output>: Clone,
{
fn clone(&self) -> Self {
let this: &Y::Output = self.get();
// We have an &T not a T, and we can clone YokeTraitHack<T>
let this_hack = YokeTraitHack(this).into_ref();
Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { Y::make(this_hack.clone().0) }),
cart: self.cart.clone(),
}
}
}
#[test]
fn test_clone() {
let local_data = "foo".to_owned();
let y1 = Yoke::<alloc::borrow::Cow<'static, str>, Rc<String>>::attach_to_zero_copy_cart(
Rc::new(local_data),
);
// Test basic clone
let y2 = y1.clone();
assert_eq!(y1.get(), "foo");
assert_eq!(y2.get(), "foo");
// Test clone with mutation on target
let mut y3 = y1.clone();
y3.with_mut(|y| {
y.to_mut().push_str("bar");
});
assert_eq!(y1.get(), "foo");
assert_eq!(y2.get(), "foo");
assert_eq!(y3.get(), "foobar");
// Test that mutations on source do not affect target
let y4 = y3.clone();
y3.with_mut(|y| {
y.to_mut().push_str("baz");
});
assert_eq!(y1.get(), "foo");
assert_eq!(y2.get(), "foo");
assert_eq!(y3.get(), "foobarbaz");
assert_eq!(y4.get(), "foobar");
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> Yoke<Y, C> {
/// Allows one to "project" a yoke to perform a transformation on the data, potentially
/// looking at a subfield, and producing a new yoke. This will move cart, and the provided
/// transformation is only allowed to use data known to be borrowed from the cart.
///
/// The callback takes an additional `PhantomData<&()>` parameter to anchor lifetimes
/// (see [#86702](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86702)) This parameter
/// should just be ignored in the callback.
///
/// This can be used, for example, to transform data from one format to another:
///
/// ```
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// #
/// fn slice(y: Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>>) -> Yoke<&'static [u8], Rc<[u8]>> {
/// y.map_project(move |yk, _| yk.as_bytes())
/// }
/// ```
///
/// This can also be used to create a yoke for a subfield
///
/// ```
/// # use yoke::{Yoke, Yokeable};
/// # use std::mem;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// #
/// // also safely implements Yokeable<'a>
/// struct Bar<'a> {
/// string_1: &'a str,
/// string_2: &'a str,
/// }
///
/// fn map_project_string_1(
/// bar: Yoke<Bar<'static>, Rc<[u8]>>,
/// ) -> Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// bar.map_project(|bar, _| bar.string_1)
/// }
///
/// #
/// # unsafe impl<'a> Yokeable<'a> for Bar<'static> {
/// # type Output = Bar<'a>;
/// # fn transform(&'a self) -> &'a Bar<'a> {
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_owned(self) -> Bar<'a> {
/// # // covariant lifetime cast, can be done safely
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # unsafe fn make(from: Bar<'a>) -> Self {
/// # let ret = mem::transmute_copy(&from);
/// # mem::forget(from);
/// # ret
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_mut<F>(&'a mut self, f: F)
/// # where
/// # F: 'static + FnOnce(&'a mut Self::Output),
/// # {
/// # unsafe { f(mem::transmute(self)) }
/// # }
/// # }
/// ```
//
// Safety docs can be found below on `__project_safety_docs()`
pub fn map_project<P, F>(self, f: F) -> Yoke<P, C>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
F: for<'a> FnOnce(
<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> <P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
{
let p = f(self.yokeable.into_inner().transform_owned(), PhantomData);
Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart,
}
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::map_project`], however it does not move
/// [`Self`] and instead clones the cart (only if the cart is a [`CloneableCart`])
///
/// This is a bit more efficient than cloning the [`Yoke`] and then calling [`Yoke::map_project`]
/// because then it will not clone fields that are going to be discarded.
pub fn map_project_cloned<'this, P, F>(&'this self, f: F) -> Yoke<P, C>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
C: CloneableCart,
F: for<'a> FnOnce(
&'this <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> <P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
{
let p = f(self.get(), PhantomData);
Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart.clone(),
}
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::map_project`], however it can also bubble up an error
/// from the callback.
///
/// ```
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::str::{self, Utf8Error};
/// #
/// fn slice(
/// y: Yoke<&'static [u8], Rc<[u8]>>,
/// ) -> Result<Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>>, Utf8Error> {
/// y.try_map_project(move |bytes, _| str::from_utf8(bytes))
/// }
/// ```
///
/// This can also be used to create a yoke for a subfield
///
/// ```
/// # use yoke::{Yoke, Yokeable};
/// # use std::mem;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use std::str::{self, Utf8Error};
/// #
/// // also safely implements Yokeable<'a>
/// struct Bar<'a> {
/// bytes_1: &'a [u8],
/// string_2: &'a str,
/// }
///
/// fn map_project_string_1(
/// bar: Yoke<Bar<'static>, Rc<[u8]>>,
/// ) -> Result<Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>>, Utf8Error> {
/// bar.try_map_project(|bar, _| str::from_utf8(bar.bytes_1))
/// }
///
/// #
/// # unsafe impl<'a> Yokeable<'a> for Bar<'static> {
/// # type Output = Bar<'a>;
/// # fn transform(&'a self) -> &'a Bar<'a> {
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_owned(self) -> Bar<'a> {
/// # // covariant lifetime cast, can be done safely
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # unsafe fn make(from: Bar<'a>) -> Self {
/// # let ret = mem::transmute_copy(&from);
/// # mem::forget(from);
/// # ret
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_mut<F>(&'a mut self, f: F)
/// # where
/// # F: 'static + FnOnce(&'a mut Self::Output),
/// # {
/// # unsafe { f(mem::transmute(self)) }
/// # }
/// # }
/// ```
pub fn try_map_project<P, F, E>(self, f: F) -> Result<Yoke<P, C>, E>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
F: for<'a> FnOnce(
<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> Result<<P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output, E>,
{
let p = f(self.yokeable.into_inner().transform_owned(), PhantomData)?;
Ok(Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart,
})
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::try_map_project`], however it does not move
/// [`Self`] and instead clones the cart (only if the cart is a [`CloneableCart`])
///
/// This is a bit more efficient than cloning the [`Yoke`] and then calling [`Yoke::map_project`]
/// because then it will not clone fields that are going to be discarded.
pub fn try_map_project_cloned<'this, P, F, E>(&'this self, f: F) -> Result<Yoke<P, C>, E>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
C: CloneableCart,
F: for<'a> FnOnce(
&'this <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> Result<<P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output, E>,
{
let p = f(self.get(), PhantomData)?;
Ok(Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart.clone(),
})
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::map_project`], but it works around older versions
/// of Rust not being able to use `FnOnce` by using an explicit capture input.
///
/// See the docs of [`Yoke::map_project`] for how this works.
pub fn map_project_with_explicit_capture<P, T>(
self,
capture: T,
f: for<'a> fn(
<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
capture: T,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> <P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
) -> Yoke<P, C>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
{
let p = f(
self.yokeable.into_inner().transform_owned(),
capture,
PhantomData,
);
Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart,
}
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::map_project_cloned`], but it works around older versions
/// of Rust not being able to use `FnOnce` by using an explicit capture input.
///
/// See the docs of [`Yoke::map_project_cloned`] for how this works.
pub fn map_project_cloned_with_explicit_capture<'this, P, T>(
&'this self,
capture: T,
f: for<'a> fn(
&'this <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
capture: T,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> <P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
) -> Yoke<P, C>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
C: CloneableCart,
{
let p = f(self.get(), capture, PhantomData);
Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart.clone(),
}
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::try_map_project`], but it works around older versions
/// of Rust not being able to use `FnOnce` by using an explicit capture input.
///
/// See the docs of [`Yoke::try_map_project`] for how this works.
#[allow(clippy::type_complexity)]
pub fn try_map_project_with_explicit_capture<P, T, E>(
self,
capture: T,
f: for<'a> fn(
<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
capture: T,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> Result<<P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output, E>,
) -> Result<Yoke<P, C>, E>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
{
let p = f(
self.yokeable.into_inner().transform_owned(),
capture,
PhantomData,
)?;
Ok(Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart,
})
}
/// This is similar to [`Yoke::try_map_project_cloned`], but it works around older versions
/// of Rust not being able to use `FnOnce` by using an explicit capture input.
///
/// See the docs of [`Yoke::try_map_project_cloned`] for how this works.
#[allow(clippy::type_complexity)]
pub fn try_map_project_cloned_with_explicit_capture<'this, P, T, E>(
&'this self,
capture: T,
f: for<'a> fn(
&'this <Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output,
capture: T,
PhantomData<&'a ()>,
) -> Result<<P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output, E>,
) -> Result<Yoke<P, C>, E>
where
P: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>,
C: CloneableCart,
{
let p = f(self.get(), capture, PhantomData)?;
Ok(Yoke {
yokeable: KindaSortaDangling::new(unsafe { P::make(p) }),
cart: self.cart.clone(),
})
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: 'static + Sized> Yoke<Y, Rc<C>> {
/// Allows type-erasing the cart in a `Yoke<Y, Rc<C>>`.
///
/// The yoke only carries around a cart type `C` for its destructor,
/// since it needs to be able to guarantee that its internal references
/// are valid for the lifetime of the Yoke. As such, the actual type of the
/// Cart is not very useful unless you wish to extract data out of it
/// via [`Yoke::backing_cart()`]. Erasing the cart allows for one to mix
/// [`Yoke`]s obtained from different sources.
///
/// In case the cart type `C` is not already an `Rc<T>`, you can use
/// [`Yoke::wrap_cart_in_rc()`] to wrap it.
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// use std::rc::Rc;
/// use yoke::erased::ErasedRcCart;
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let buffer1: Rc<String> = Rc::new(" foo bar baz ".into());
/// let buffer2: Box<String> = Box::new(" baz quux ".into());
///
/// let yoke1 =
/// Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer1, |rc| rc.trim());
/// let yoke2 = Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer2, |b| b.trim());
///
/// let erased1: Yoke<_, ErasedRcCart> = yoke1.erase_rc_cart();
/// // Wrap the Box in an Rc to make it compatible
/// let erased2: Yoke<_, ErasedRcCart> =
/// yoke2.wrap_cart_in_rc().erase_rc_cart();
///
/// // Now erased1 and erased2 have the same type!
/// ```
pub fn erase_rc_cart(self) -> Yoke<Y, ErasedRcCart> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just
// type-erased
self.replace_cart(|c| c as ErasedRcCart)
}
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: 'static + Sized + Send + Sync> Yoke<Y, Arc<C>> {
/// Allows type-erasing the cart in a `Yoke<Y, Arc<C>>`.
///
/// The yoke only carries around a cart type `C` for its destructor,
/// since it needs to be able to guarantee that its internal references
/// are valid for the lifetime of the Yoke. As such, the actual type of the
/// Cart is not very useful unless you wish to extract data out of it
/// via [`Yoke::backing_cart()`]. Erasing the cart allows for one to mix
/// [`Yoke`]s obtained from different sources.
///
/// In case the cart type `C` is not already an `Arc<T>`, you can use
/// [`Yoke::wrap_cart_in_arc()`] to wrap it.
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// use std::sync::Arc;
/// use yoke::erased::ErasedArcCart;
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let buffer1: Arc<String> = Arc::new(" foo bar baz ".into());
/// let buffer2: Box<String> = Box::new(" baz quux ".into());
///
/// let yoke1 =
/// Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer1, |arc| arc.trim());
/// let yoke2 = Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer2, |b| b.trim());
///
/// let erased1: Yoke<_, ErasedArcCart> = yoke1.erase_arc_cart();
/// // Wrap the Box in an Rc to make it compatible
/// let erased2: Yoke<_, ErasedArcCart> =
/// yoke2.wrap_cart_in_arc().erase_arc_cart();
///
/// // Now erased1 and erased2 have the same type!
/// ```
pub fn erase_arc_cart(self) -> Yoke<Y, ErasedArcCart> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just
// type-erased
self.replace_cart(|c| c as ErasedArcCart)
}
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C: 'static + Sized> Yoke<Y, Box<C>> {
/// Allows type-erasing the cart in a `Yoke<Y, Box<C>>`.
///
/// The yoke only carries around a cart type `C` for its destructor,
/// since it needs to be able to guarantee that its internal references
/// are valid for the lifetime of the Yoke. As such, the actual type of the
/// Cart is not very useful unless you wish to extract data out of it
/// via [`Yoke::backing_cart()`]. Erasing the cart allows for one to mix
/// [`Yoke`]s obtained from different sources.
///
/// In case the cart type `C` is not already `Box<T>`, you can use
/// [`Yoke::wrap_cart_in_box()`] to wrap it.
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```rust
/// use std::rc::Rc;
/// use yoke::erased::ErasedBoxCart;
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let buffer1: Rc<String> = Rc::new(" foo bar baz ".into());
/// let buffer2: Box<String> = Box::new(" baz quux ".into());
///
/// let yoke1 =
/// Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer1, |rc| rc.trim());
/// let yoke2 = Yoke::<&'static str, _>::attach_to_cart(buffer2, |b| b.trim());
///
/// // Wrap the Rc in an Box to make it compatible
/// let erased1: Yoke<_, ErasedBoxCart> =
/// yoke1.wrap_cart_in_box().erase_box_cart();
/// let erased2: Yoke<_, ErasedBoxCart> = yoke2.erase_box_cart();
///
/// // Now erased1 and erased2 have the same type!
/// ```
pub fn erase_box_cart(self) -> Yoke<Y, ErasedBoxCart> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just
// type-erased
self.replace_cart(|c| c as ErasedBoxCart)
}
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "alloc")]
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> Yoke<Y, C> {
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in a `Box<T>`.
/// Can be paired with [`Yoke::erase_box_cart()`]
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_box(self) -> Yoke<Y, Box<C>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(Box::new)
}
}
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in an `Rc<T>`.
/// Can be paired with [`Yoke::erase_rc_cart()`], or generally used
/// to make the [`Yoke`] cloneable.
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_rc(self) -> Yoke<Y, Rc<C>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(Rc::new)
}
}
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in an `Rc<T>`.
/// Can be paired with [`Yoke::erase_arc_cart()`], or generally used
/// to make the [`Yoke`] cloneable.
///
/// ✨ *Enabled with the `alloc` Cargo feature.*
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_arc(self) -> Yoke<Y, Arc<C>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(Arc::new)
}
}
}
impl<Y: for<'a> Yokeable<'a>, C> Yoke<Y, C> {
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in an [`EitherCart`].
///
/// This function wraps the cart into the `A` variant. To wrap it into the
/// `B` variant, use [`Self::wrap_cart_in_either_b()`].
///
/// For an example, see [`EitherCart`].
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_either_a<B>(self) -> Yoke<Y, EitherCart<C, B>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(EitherCart::A)
}
}
/// Helper function allowing one to wrap the cart type `C` in an [`EitherCart`].
///
/// This function wraps the cart into the `B` variant. To wrap it into the
/// `A` variant, use [`Self::wrap_cart_in_either_a()`].
///
/// For an example, see [`EitherCart`].
#[inline]
pub fn wrap_cart_in_either_b<A>(self) -> Yoke<Y, EitherCart<A, C>> {
unsafe {
// safe because the cart is preserved, just wrapped
self.replace_cart(EitherCart::B)
}
}
}
/// # Safety docs for project()
///
/// (Docs are on a private const to allow the use of compile_fail doctests)
///
/// This is safe to perform because of the choice of lifetimes on `f`, that is,
/// `for<a> fn(<Y as Yokeable<'a>>::Output, &'a ()) -> <P as Yokeable<'a>>::Output`.
///
/// What we want this function to do is take a Yokeable (`Y`) that is borrowing from the cart, and
/// produce another Yokeable (`P`) that also borrows from the same cart. There are a couple potential
/// hazards here:
///
/// - `P` ends up borrowing data from `Y` (or elsewhere) that did _not_ come from the cart,
/// for example `P` could borrow owned data from a `Cow`. This would make the `Yoke<P>` dependent
/// on data owned only by the `Yoke<Y>`.
/// - Borrowed data from `Y` escapes with the wrong lifetime
///
/// Let's walk through these and see how they're prevented.
///
/// ```rust, compile_fail
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// fn borrow_potentially_owned(y: &Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>) -> Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// y.map_project_cloned(|cow, _| &*cow)
/// }
/// ```
///
/// In this case, the lifetime of `&*cow` is `&'this str`, however the function needs to be able to return
/// `&'a str` _for all `'a`_, which isn't possible.
///
///
/// ```rust, compile_fail
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// # use yoke::Yoke;
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// fn borrow_potentially_owned(y: Yoke<Cow<'static, str>, Rc<[u8]>>) -> Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// y.map_project(|cow, _| &*cow)
/// }
/// ```
///
/// This has the same issue, `&*cow` is borrowing for a local lifetime.
///
/// Similarly, trying to project an owned field of a struct will produce similar errors:
///
/// ```rust,compile_fail
/// # use std::borrow::Cow;
/// # use yoke::{Yoke, Yokeable};
/// # use std::mem;
/// # use std::rc::Rc;
/// #
/// // also safely implements Yokeable<'a>
/// struct Bar<'a> {
/// owned: String,
/// string_2: &'a str,
/// }
///
/// fn map_project_owned(bar: &Yoke<Bar<'static>, Rc<[u8]>>) -> Yoke<&'static str, Rc<[u8]>> {
/// // ERROR (but works if you replace owned with string_2)
/// bar.map_project_cloned(|bar, _| &*bar.owned)
/// }
///
/// #
/// # unsafe impl<'a> Yokeable<'a> for Bar<'static> {
/// # type Output = Bar<'a>;
/// # fn transform(&'a self) -> &'a Bar<'a> {
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_owned(self) -> Bar<'a> {
/// # // covariant lifetime cast, can be done safely
/// # self
/// # }
/// #
/// # unsafe fn make(from: Bar<'a>) -> Self {
/// # let ret = mem::transmute_copy(&from);
/// # mem::forget(from);
/// # ret
/// # }
/// #
/// # fn transform_mut<F>(&'a mut self, f: F)
/// # where
/// # F: 'static + FnOnce(&'a mut Self::Output),
/// # {
/// # unsafe { f(mem::transmute(self)) }
/// # }
/// # }
/// ```
///
/// Borrowed data from `Y` similarly cannot escape with the wrong lifetime because of the `for<'a>`, since
/// it will never be valid for the borrowed data to escape for all lifetimes of 'a. Internally, `.project()`
/// uses `.get()`, however the signature forces the callers to be able to handle every lifetime.
///
/// `'a` is the only lifetime that matters here; `Yokeable`s must be `'static` and since
/// `Output` is an associated type it can only have one lifetime, `'a` (there's nowhere for it to get another from).
/// `Yoke`s can get additional lifetimes via the cart, and indeed, `project()` can operate on `Yoke<_, &'b [u8]>`,
/// however this lifetime is inaccessible to the closure, and even if it were accessible the `for<'a>` would force
/// it out of the output. All external lifetimes (from other found outside the yoke/closures
/// are similarly constrained here.
///
/// Essentially, safety is achieved by using `for<'a> fn(...)` with `'a` used in both `Yokeable`s to ensure that
/// the output yokeable can _only_ have borrowed data flow in to it from the input. All paths of unsoundness require the
/// unification of an existential and universal lifetime, which isn't possible.
const _: () = ();
/// # Safety docs for attach_to_cart()'s signature
///
/// The `attach_to_cart()` family of methods get by by using the following bound:
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// F: for<'de> FnOnce(&'de <C as Deref>::Target) -> <Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output,
/// C::Target: 'static
/// ```
///
/// to enforce that the yoking closure produces a yokeable that is *only* allowed to borrow from the cart.
/// A way to be sure of this is as follows: imagine if `F` *did* borrow data of lifetime `'a` and stuff it in
/// its output. Then that lifetime `'a` would have to live at least as long as `'de` *for all `'de`*.
/// The only lifetime that satisfies that is `'static` (since at least one of the potential `'de`s is `'static`),
/// and we're fine with that.
///
/// ## Implied bounds and variance
///
/// The `C::Target: 'static` bound is tricky, however. Let's imagine a situation where we *didn't* have that bound.
///
/// One thing to remember is that we are okay with the cart itself borrowing from places,
/// e.g. `&[u8]` is a valid cart, as is `Box<&[u8]>`. `C` is not `'static`.
///
/// (I'm going to use `CT` in prose to refer to `C::Target` here, since almost everything here has to do
/// with C::Target and not C itself.)
///
/// Unfortunately, there's a sneaky additional bound inside `F`. The signature of `F` is *actually*
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// F: for<'de> where<C::Target: 'de> FnOnce(&'de C::Target) -> <Y as Yokeable<'de>>::Output
/// ```
///
/// using made-up "where clause inside HRTB" syntax to represent a type that can be represented inside the compiler
/// and type system but not in Rust code. The `CT: 'de` bond comes from the `&'de C::Target`: any time you
/// write `&'a T`, an implied bound of `T: 'a` materializes and is stored alongside it, since references cannot refer
/// to data that itself refers to data of shorter lifetimes. If a reference is valid, its referent must be valid for
/// the duration of the reference's lifetime, so every reference *inside* its referent must also be valid, giving us `T: 'a`.
/// This kind of constraint is often called a "well formedness" constraint: `&'a T` is not "well formed" without that
/// bound, and rustc is being helpful by giving it to us for free.
///
/// Unfortunately, this messes with our universal quantification. The `for<'de>` is no longer "For all lifetimes `'de`",
/// it is "for all lifetimes `'de` *where `CT: 'de`*". And if `CT` borrows from somewhere (with lifetime `'ct`), then we get a
/// `'ct: 'de` bound, and `'de` candidates that live longer than `'ct` won't actually be considered.
/// The neat little logic at the beginning stops working.
///
/// `attach_to_cart()` will instead enforce that the produced yokeable *either* borrows from the cart (fine), or from
/// data that has a lifetime that is at least `'ct`. Which means that `attach_to_cart()` will allow us to borrow locals
/// provided they live at least as long as `'ct`.
///
/// Is this a problem?
///
/// This is totally fine if CT's lifetime is covariant: if C is something like `Box<&'ct [u8]>`, even if our
/// yoked object borrows from locals outliving `'ct`, our Yoke can't outlive that
/// lifetime `'ct` anyway (since it's a part of the cart type), so we're fine.
///
/// However it's completely broken for contravariant carts (e.g. `Box<fn(&'ct u8)>`). In that case
/// we still get `'ct: 'de`, and we still end up being able to
/// borrow from locals that outlive `'ct`. However, our Yoke _can_ outlive
/// that lifetime, because Yoke shares its variance over `'ct`
/// with the cart type, and the cart type is contravariant over `'ct`.
/// So the Yoke can be upcast to having a longer lifetime than `'ct`, and *that* Yoke
/// can outlive `'ct`.
///
/// We fix this by forcing `C::Target: 'static` in `attach_to_cart()`, which would make it work
/// for fewer types, but would also allow Yoke to continue to be covariant over cart lifetimes if necessary.
///
/// An alternate fix would be to not allowing yoke to ever be upcast over lifetimes contained in the cart
/// by forcing them to be invariant. This is a bit more restrictive and affects *all* `Yoke` users, not just
/// those using `attach_to_cart()`.
///
/// See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106431 for potentially fixing this upstream by
/// changing how the bound works.
///
/// # Tests
///
/// Here's a broken `attach_to_cart()` that attempts to borrow from a local:
///
/// ```rust,compile_fail
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let cart = vec![1, 2, 3, 4].into_boxed_slice();
/// let local = vec![4, 5, 6, 7];
/// let yoke: Yoke<&[u8], Box<[u8]>> = Yoke::attach_to_cart(cart, |_| &*local);
/// ```
///
/// Fails as expected.
///
/// And here's a working one with a local borrowed cart that does not do any sneaky borrows whilst attaching.
///
/// ```rust
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// let cart = vec![1, 2, 3, 4].into_boxed_slice();
/// let local = vec![4, 5, 6, 7];
/// let yoke: Yoke<&[u8], &[u8]> = Yoke::attach_to_cart(&cart, |c| &*c);
/// ```
///
/// Here's an `attach_to_cart()` that attempts to borrow from a longer-lived local due to
/// the cart being covariant. It fails, but would not if the alternate fix of forcing Yoke to be invariant
/// were implemented. It is technically a safe operation:
///
/// ```rust,compile_fail
/// use yoke::Yoke;
/// // longer lived
/// let local = vec![4, 5, 6, 7];
///
/// let backing = vec![1, 2, 3, 4];
/// let cart = Box::new(&*backing);
///
/// let yoke: Yoke<&[u8], Box<&[u8]>> = Yoke::attach_to_cart(cart, |_| &*local);
/// println!("{:?}", yoke.get());
/// ```
///
/// Finally, here's an `attach_to_cart()` that attempts to borrow from a longer lived local
/// in the case of a contravariant lifetime. It does not compile, but in and of itself is not dangerous:
///
/// ```rust,compile_fail
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// type Contra<'a> = fn(&'a ());
///
/// let local = String::from("Hello World!");
/// let yoke: Yoke<&'static str, Box<Contra<'_>>> = Yoke::attach_to_cart(Box::new((|_| {}) as _), |_| &local[..]);
/// println!("{:?}", yoke.get());
/// ```
///
/// It is dangerous if allowed to transform (testcase from #2926)
///
/// ```rust,compile_fail
/// use yoke::Yoke;
///
/// type Contra<'a> = fn(&'a ());
///
///
/// let local = String::from("Hello World!");
/// let yoke: Yoke<&'static str, Box<Contra<'_>>> = Yoke::attach_to_cart(Box::new((|_| {}) as _), |_| &local[..]);
/// println!("{:?}", yoke.get());
/// let yoke_longer: Yoke<&'static str, Box<Contra<'static>>> = yoke;
/// let leaked: &'static Yoke<&'static str, Box<Contra<'static>>> = Box::leak(Box::new(yoke_longer));
/// let reference: &'static str = leaked.get();
///
/// println!("pre-drop: {reference}");
/// drop(local);
/// println!("post-drop: {reference}");
/// ```
const _: () = ();