Continue drafting wor

case-study-borrow-checker
Bradlee Speice 2018-12-26 10:19:34 -05:00
parent b0fe32c4dc
commit 555eca2660
1 changed files with 61 additions and 16 deletions

View File

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---
layout: post
title: "Understanding Allocations"
title: "Understanding Heap Allocations in Rust"
description: "An introduction to the Rust memory model"
category:
tags: [rust]
@ -8,33 +8,72 @@ tags: [rust]
There's an alchemy of distilling complex technical topics into articles and videos
that change the way programmers see the tools they interact with on a regular basis.
I've known what a linker was, but there's a staggering complexity to get from
[source code to `main()`](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOfucXtyEsU). Rust programmers
use the [`Box`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/boxed/struct.Box.html) type
all the time, but there's a rich history of the Rust language itself wrapped up in
I knew what a linker was, but there's a staggering complexity to get from
[from `main()` to an executable](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOfucXtyEsU).
Rust programmers use the [`Box`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/boxed/struct.Box.html)
type all the time, but there's a rich history of the Rust language itself wrapped up in
[how special it is](https://manishearth.github.io/blog/2017/01/10/rust-tidbits-box-is-special/).
In a similar vein, I want you to look at code and understand memory;
the complex choreography of processor, operating system, and program that frees you
to focus on functionality beyond rote book-keeping. The Rust compiler relieves a great deal
of the cognitive burden associated with memory management. Even so, let's make time
to explore what's going on under the hood, so we can make better exploit the systems
involved in the code we write.
to focus on functionality far beyond frivolous book-keeping. The Rust compiler relieves
a great deal of the cognitive burden associated with memory management, but let's make time
to explore what's going on under the hood.
Let's learn a bit about allocating memory in Rust.
# Table of Contents
This post is intended as both guide and reference material; we'll work to establish
an understanding of how Rust makes use of memory in a program, then summarize each
an understanding of the different memory types Rust makes use of, then summarize each
section for easy citation in the future. To that end, a table of contents is provided
to assist in easy navigation:
- [Distinguishing regions of memory](#distinguishing-regions-of-memory)
- Rust and the Stack
- Rust and the Heap
- Understanding Compiler Optimizations
- Summary: When does Rust allocate?
- [Foreword](#foreword)
- Non-Heap Memory Types
- Piling On - the Heap in Rust
- Compiler Optimizations Make Everything Complicated
- Summary: When Does Rust Allocate?
- Appendix and Further Reading
# Foreword
There's a simple way to guarantee you never need to know the content
of this article:
1. Only write `#![no_std]` crates
2. Never use `unsafe`
3. Never use `#![feature(alloc)]`
For some uses of Rust, typically embedded devices, these constraints make sense.
They're working with very limited memory, and the program binary size itself may
affect the memory available! There's no operating system able to manage the heap,
but that's not an issue because your program is likely the only one running.
The [embedonomicon] is ever in mind, and you just might interact with extra
peripherals by reading and writing to exact memory addresses.
Most Rust programs find these requirements overly burdensome though. C++ developers
would struggle without access to [`std::vector`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/container/vector),
and Rust developers would struggle without [`std::vec`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/vec/struct.Vec.html).
But in this scenario, `std::vec` is actually part of the
[`alloc` crate](https://doc.rust-lang.org/alloc/vec/struct.Vec.html), and thus off-limits.
Or how would you use trait objects? Rust's monomorphization still works, but there's no
[`Box<dyn Trait>`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/alloc/boxed/struct.Box.html)
available to use for dynamic dispatch.
Given a target audience of "basically every Rust developer," let's talk about
some of the details you don't normally have to worry about. This article will focus
on "safe" Rust only; `unsafe` mode allows you to make use of platform-specific
allocation APIs (think [libc] and [winapi] implementations of [malloc]) that
we'll ignore for the time being. We'll also assume a "debug" build of libraries
and applications (what you get with `cargo run` and `cargo test`) and address
"release" mode at the end (`cargo run --release` and `cargo test --release`).
Finally, a caveat: while the details are unlikely to change, the Rust docs
include a warning worth repeating here:
> Rust does not currently have a rigorously and formally defined memory model.
> - the [Rust docs](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ptr/fn.read_volatile.html)
# Distinguishing regions of memory
@ -61,7 +100,13 @@ Questions:
1. Where do collection types allocate memory?
2. Does a Box<> always allocate heap?
3. Passing Box<Trait> vs. genericizing/monomorphization
4. Other pointer types? Do Rc<>/Arc<> force heap allocation?
# Understanding compiler optimizations
Example: Compiler stripping out allocations of Box<>, Vec::push()
Example: Compiler stripping out allocations of Box<>, Vec::push()
[embedonomicon]: https://docs.rust-embedded.org/embedonomicon/
[libc]: CRATES.IO LINK
[winapi]: CRATES.IO LINK
[malloc]: MANPAGE LINK