[swift-evolution] SE-184 Improved Pointers

Andrew Trick atrick at apple.com
Wed Aug 9 00:51:12 CDT 2017


> On Aug 8, 2017, at 8:44 PM, Taylor Swift <kelvin13ma at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> cool,, as for UnsafeMutableRawBufferPointer.copy(from:bytes:), I cannot find such a function anywhere in the API. There is copyBytes(from:) <https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swift/unsafemutablerawbufferpointer/2635415-copybytes>, but the documentation is messed up and mentions a nonexistent count: argument over and over again. The documentation also doesn’t mention what happens if there is a length mismatch, so users are effectively relying on an implementation detail. I don’t know how to best resolve this.

We currently have `UnsafeMutableRawBufferPointer.copyBytes(from:)`. I don’t think your proposal changes that. The current docs refer to the `source` parameter, which is correct. Docs refer to the parameter name, not the label name. So `source.count` is the size of the input. I was pointing out that it has the semantics: `debugAssert(source.count <= self.count)`.

Your proposal changes `UnsafeRawPointer.copyBytes(from:count:)` to `UnsafeRawPointer.copy(from:bytes:)`. Originally we wanted to those API names to match, but I’m fine with your change. What is more important is that the semantics are the same as `copyBytes(from:)`. Furthermore, any new methods that you add that copy into a raw buffer (e.g. initializeMemory(as:from:count:)) should have similar behavior.

—

Another thing. The initialization methods that you’re adding to `UnsafeRawPointer` and `UnsafeRawBufferPointer` should return typed `UnsafePointer<Element>` and `UnsafeBufferPointer<Element>` respectively.

Thanks,

-Andy

> On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 11:33 PM, Andrew Trick <atrick at apple.com <mailto:atrick at apple.com>> wrote:
> 
>> On Aug 8, 2017, at 8:29 PM, Taylor Swift <kelvin13ma at gmail.com <mailto:kelvin13ma at gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 11:24 PM, Andrew Trick <atrick at apple.com <mailto:atrick at apple.com>> wrote:
>> 
>>> On Aug 8, 2017, at 6:51 PM, Taylor Swift <kelvin13ma at gmail.com <mailto:kelvin13ma at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 9:38 PM, Andrew Trick <atrick at apple.com <mailto:atrick at apple.com>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> > UnsafeMutableRawBufferPointer.allocate(bytes:alignedTo:)
>>>> 
>>>> Well, I think it's somewhat ridiculous for users to write this every time they allocate a buffer:
>>>> 
>>>> `UnsafeMutableRawBufferPointer.allocate(bytes: size, alignedTo: MemoryLayout<UInt>.alignment)`
>>>> 
>>>> If anyone reading the code is unsure about the Swift API's alignment
>>>> guarantee, it's trivial to check the API docs.
>>>> 
>>>> You could introduce a clearly documented default `alignedTo`
>>>> argument. The reason I didn't do that is that the runtime won't
>>>> respect it anyway. But I think it would be fair to go ahead with the
>>>> API and file a bug against the runtime.
>>>> 
>>>> Default argument of MemoryLayout<Int>.alignment is the way to go but as you said i don’t know if that is actually allowed/works. An alternative is to have two allocate methods each, one that takes an alignment argument and one that doesn’t (and aligns to pointer alignment) but that feels inelegant. Default arguments would be better.
>>> 
>>> Default argument makes sense to me too. Then the raw buffer pointer and regular raw pointer APIs can be consistent with each other.
>>> 
>>> Runtime bug: https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-5664 <https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-5664>
>>> 
>>> yikes i was not aware of this. I don’t think it’s bad enough to warrant dropping the argument like with deallocate(capacity:) but I can imagine bad things happening to code that crams extra inhabitants into pointers.
>> 
>> If we ever need to do pointer adjustment during deallocation to accommodate alignment, then I think the Swift runtime can track that. I see no reason to muddy the UnsafeRawPointer API with it. So, I agree with your proposed change to drop `alignedTo` there.
>> 
>> -Andy
>> 
>> oh lol I was talking about assuming the pointer returned by allocate(bytes:alignedTo:) is a multiple of alignedTo. Some code might be relying on the last few bits of the pointer being zero; i.e. sticking bit flags there like how some implementations store the red/black color information in a red-black tree node.
> 
> Oh, sure. But I think it will be easy to fix the runtime. We could probably do it before the proposal is accepted if necessary.
> -Andy
> 
> 

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