Crate alloc [−] [src]
The Rust core allocation library
This is the lowest level library through which allocation in Rust can be performed.
This library, like libcore, is not intended for general usage, but rather as a building block of other libraries. The types and interfaces in this library are reexported through the standard library, and should not be used through this library.
Currently, there are four major definitions in this library.
Boxed values
The Box
type is a smart pointer type. There can
only be one owner of a Box
, and the owner can decide to mutate the
contents, which live on the heap.
This type can be sent among threads efficiently as the size of a Box
value
is the same as that of a pointer. Tree-like data structures are often built
with boxes because each node often has only one owner, the parent.
Reference counted pointers
The Rc
type is a non-threadsafe reference-counted pointer
type intended for sharing memory within a thread. An Rc
pointer wraps a
type, T
, and only allows access to &T
, a shared reference.
This type is useful when inherited mutability (such as using Box
) is too
constraining for an application, and is often paired with the Cell
or
RefCell
types in order to allow mutation.
Atomically reference counted pointers
The Arc
type is the threadsafe equivalent of the Rc
type. It provides all the same functionality of Rc
, except it requires
that the contained type T
is shareable. Additionally, Arc<T>
is itself
sendable while Rc<T>
is not.
This types allows for shared access to the contained data, and is often paired with synchronization primitives such as mutexes to allow mutation of shared resources.
Heap interfaces
The heap
module defines the low-level interface to the
default global allocator. It is not compatible with the libc allocator API.
Reexports
pub use oom::oom; |
Modules
arc |
Threadsafe reference-counted boxes (the |
boxed |
A pointer type for heap allocation. |
rc |
Thread-local reference-counted boxes (the |
heap | [Unstable] |
oom | [Unstable] |
raw_vec | [Unstable] |