Function nom::lib::std::slice::from_raw_parts1.0.0[][src]

pub unsafe fn from_raw_parts<'a, T>(data: *const T, len: usize) -> &'a [T]

Notable traits for &'_ [u8]

impl<'_> Read for &'_ [u8]impl<'_> Write for &'_ mut [u8]

Forms a slice from a pointer and a length.

The len argument is the number of elements, not the number of bytes.

Safety

Behavior is undefined if any of the following conditions are violated:

Caveat

The lifetime for the returned slice is inferred from its usage. To prevent accidental misuse, it’s suggested to tie the lifetime to whichever source lifetime is safe in the context, such as by providing a helper function taking the lifetime of a host value for the slice, or by explicit annotation.

Examples

use std::slice;

// manifest a slice for a single element
let x = 42;
let ptr = &x as *const _;
let slice = unsafe { slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, 1) };
assert_eq!(slice[0], 42);

Incorrect usage

The following join_slices function is unsound ⚠️

use std::slice;

fn join_slices<'a, T>(fst: &'a [T], snd: &'a [T]) -> &'a [T] {
    let fst_end = fst.as_ptr().wrapping_add(fst.len());
    let snd_start = snd.as_ptr();
    assert_eq!(fst_end, snd_start, "Slices must be contiguous!");
    unsafe {
        // The assertion above ensures `fst` and `snd` are contiguous, but they might
        // still be contained within _different allocated objects_, in which case
        // creating this slice is undefined behavior.
        slice::from_raw_parts(fst.as_ptr(), fst.len() + snd.len())
    }
}

fn main() {
    // `a` and `b` are different allocated objects...
    let a = 42;
    let b = 27;
    // ... which may nevertheless be laid out contiguously in memory: | a | b |
    let _ = join_slices(slice::from_ref(&a), slice::from_ref(&b)); // UB
}