rust/doc/rust.md
Brian Anderson e08a805b30 Merge remote-tracking branch 'bstrie/rimov' into incoming
Conflicts:
	src/libsyntax/parse/parser.rs
	src/test/bench/graph500-bfs.rs
	src/test/bench/sudoku.rs
	src/test/run-pass/borrowck-mut-vec-as-imm-slice.rs
	src/test/run-pass/empty-mutable-vec.rs
	src/test/run-pass/foreach-nested.rs
	src/test/run-pass/swap-2.rs
2013-02-04 11:58:30 -08:00

122 KiB

% Rust Reference Manual

Introduction

This document is the reference manual for the Rust programming language. It provides three kinds of material:

  • Chapters that formally define the language grammar and, for each construct, informally describe its semantics and give examples of its use.
  • Chapters that informally describe the memory model, concurrency model, runtime services, linkage model and debugging facilities.
  • Appendix chapters providing rationale and references to languages that influenced the design.

This document does not serve as a tutorial introduction to the language. Background familiarity with the language is assumed. A separate tutorial document is available to help acquire such background familiarity.

This document also does not serve as a reference to the core or standard libraries included in the language distribution. Those libraries are documented separately by extracting documentation attributes from their source code.

Disclaimer

Rust is a work in progress. The language continues to evolve as the design shifts and is fleshed out in working code. Certain parts work, certain parts do not, certain parts will be removed or changed.

This manual is a snapshot written in the present tense. All features described exist in working code unless otherwise noted, but some are quite primitive or remain to be further modified by planned work. Some may be temporary. It is a draft, and we ask that you not take anything you read here as final.

If you have suggestions to make, please try to focus them on reductions to the language: possible features that can be combined or omitted. We aim to keep the size and complexity of the language under control.

Note: The grammar for Rust given in this document is rough and very incomplete; only a modest number of sections have accompanying grammar rules. Formalizing the grammar accepted by the Rust parser is ongoing work, but future versions of this document will contain a complete grammar. Moreover, we hope that this grammar will be extracted and verified as LL(1) by an automated grammar-analysis tool, and further tested against the Rust sources. Preliminary versions of this automation exist, but are not yet complete.

Notation

Rust's grammar is defined over Unicode codepoints, each conventionally denoted U+XXXX, for 4 or more hexadecimal digits X. Most of Rust's grammar is confined to the ASCII range of Unicode, and is described in this document by a dialect of Extended Backus-Naur Form (EBNF), specifically a dialect of EBNF supported by common automated LL(k) parsing tools such as llgen, rather than the dialect given in ISO 14977. The dialect can be defined self-referentially as follows:


grammar : rule + ;
rule    : nonterminal ':' productionrule ';' ;
productionrule : production [ '|' production ] * ;
production : term * ;
term : element repeats ;
element : LITERAL | IDENTIFIER | '[' productionrule ']' ;
repeats : [ '*' | '+' ] NUMBER ? | NUMBER ? | '?' ;

Where:

  • Whitespace in the grammar is ignored.
  • Square brackets are used to group rules.
  • LITERAL is a single printable ASCII character, or an escaped hexadecimal ASCII code of the form \xQQ, in single quotes, denoting the corresponding Unicode codepoint U+00QQ.
  • IDENTIFIER is a nonempty string of ASCII letters and underscores.
  • The repeat forms apply to the adjacent element, and are as follows:
    • ? means zero or one repetition
    • * means zero or more repetitions
    • + means one or more repetitions
    • NUMBER trailing a repeat symbol gives a maximum repetition count
    • NUMBER on its own gives an exact repetition count

This EBNF dialect should hopefully be familiar to many readers.

Unicode productions

A small number of productions in Rust's grammar permit Unicode codepoints outside the ASCII range; these productions are defined in terms of character properties given by the Unicode standard, rather than ASCII-range codepoints. These are given in the section Special Unicode Productions.

String table productions

Some rules in the grammar -- notably unary operators, binary operators, and keywords -- are given in a simplified form: as a listing of a table of unquoted, printable whitespace-separated strings. These cases form a subset of the rules regarding the token rule, and are assumed to be the result of a lexical-analysis phase feeding the parser, driven by a DFA, operating over the disjunction of all such string table entries.

When such a string enclosed in double-quotes (") occurs inside the grammar, it is an implicit reference to a single member of such a string table production. See tokens for more information.

Lexical structure

Input format

Rust input is interpreted as a sequence of Unicode codepoints encoded in UTF-8, normalized to Unicode normalization form NFKC. Most Rust grammar rules are defined in terms of printable ASCII-range codepoints, but a small number are defined in terms of Unicode properties or explicit codepoint lists. ^[Substitute definitions for the special Unicode productions are provided to the grammar verifier, restricted to ASCII range, when verifying the grammar in this document.]

Special Unicode Productions

The following productions in the Rust grammar are defined in terms of Unicode properties: ident, non_null, non_star, non_eol, non_slash, non_single_quote and non_double_quote.

Identifiers

The ident production is any nonempty Unicode string of the following form:

  • The first character has property XID_start
  • The remaining characters have property XID_continue

that does not occur in the set of keywords.

Note: XID_start and XID_continue as character properties cover the character ranges used to form the more familiar C and Java language-family identifiers.

Delimiter-restricted productions

Some productions are defined by exclusion of particular Unicode characters:

  • non_null is any single Unicode character aside from U+0000 (null)
  • non_eol is non_null restricted to exclude U+000A ('\n')
  • non_star is non_null restricted to exclude U+002A (*)
  • non_slash is non_null restricted to exclude U+002F (/)
  • non_single_quote is non_null restricted to exclude U+0027 (')
  • non_double_quote is non_null restricted to exclude U+0022 (")

Comments

comment : block_comment | line_comment ;
block_comment : "/*" block_comment_body * "*/" ;
block_comment_body : non_star * | '*' non_slash ;
line_comment : "//" non_eol * ;

Comments in Rust code follow the general C++ style of line and block-comment forms, with no nesting of block-comment delimiters.

Line comments beginning with three slashes (///), and block comments beginning with a repeated asterisk in the block-open sequence (/**), are interpreted as a special syntax for doc attributes. That is, they are equivalent to writing #[doc "..."] around the comment's text.

Non-doc comments are interpreted as a form of whitespace.

Whitespace

whitespace_char : '\x20' | '\x09' | '\x0a' | '\x0d' ;
whitespace : [ whitespace_char | comment ] + ;

The whitespace_char production is any nonempty Unicode string consisting of any of the following Unicode characters: U+0020 (space, ' '), U+0009 (tab, '\t'), U+000A (LF, '\n'), U+000D (CR, '\r').

Rust is a "free-form" language, meaning that all forms of whitespace serve only to separate tokens in the grammar, and have no semantic significance.

A Rust program has identical meaning if each whitespace element is replaced with any other legal whitespace element, such as a single space character.

Tokens

simple_token : keyword | unop | binop ;
token : simple_token | ident | literal | symbol | whitespace token ;

Tokens are primitive productions in the grammar defined by regular (non-recursive) languages. "Simple" tokens are given in string table production form, and occur in the rest of the grammar as double-quoted strings. Other tokens have exact rules given.

Keywords

The keywords in crate files are the following strings:

mod priv pub use

The keywords in source files are the following strings:

as assert
break
const copy
do drop
else enum extern
false fn for
if impl
let log loop
match mod move mut
priv pub pure
ref return
self static struct super
true trait type
unsafe use
while

Any of these have special meaning in their respective grammars, and are excluded from the ident rule.

Literals

A literal is an expression consisting of a single token, rather than a sequence of tokens, that immediately and directly denotes the value it evaluates to, rather than referring to it by name or some other evaluation rule. A literal is a form of constant expression, so is evaluated (primarily) at compile time.

literal : string_lit | char_lit | num_lit ;

Character and string literals

char_lit : '\x27' char_body '\x27' ;
string_lit : '"' string_body * '"' ;

char_body : non_single_quote
          | '\x5c' [ '\x27' | common_escape ] ;

string_body : non_double_quote
            | '\x5c' [ '\x22' | common_escape ] ;

common_escape : '\x5c'
              | 'n' | 'r' | 't'
              | 'x' hex_digit 2
              | 'u' hex_digit 4
              | 'U' hex_digit 8 ;

hex_digit : 'a' | 'b' | 'c' | 'd' | 'e' | 'f'
          | 'A' | 'B' | 'C' | 'D' | 'E' | 'F'
          | dec_digit ;
dec_digit : '0' | nonzero_dec ;
nonzero_dec: '1' | '2' | '3' | '4'
           | '5' | '6' | '7' | '8' | '9' ;

A character literal is a single Unicode character enclosed within two U+0027 (single-quote) characters, with the exception of U+0027 itself, which must be escaped by a preceding U+005C character (\).

A string literal is a sequence of any Unicode characters enclosed within two U+0022 (double-quote) characters, with the exception of U+0022 itself, which must be escaped by a preceding U+005C character (\).

Some additional escapes are available in either character or string literals. An escape starts with a U+005C (\) and continues with one of the following forms:

  • An 8-bit codepoint escape escape starts with U+0078 (x) and is followed by exactly two hex digits. It denotes the Unicode codepoint equal to the provided hex value.
  • A 16-bit codepoint escape starts with U+0075 (u) and is followed by exactly four hex digits. It denotes the Unicode codepoint equal to the provided hex value.
  • A 32-bit codepoint escape starts with U+0055 (U) and is followed by exactly eight hex digits. It denotes the Unicode codepoint equal to the provided hex value.
  • A whitespace escape is one of the characters U+006E (n), U+0072 (r), or U+0074 (t), denoting the unicode values U+000A (LF), U+000D (CR) or U+0009 (HT) respectively.
  • The backslash escape is the character U+005C (\) which must be escaped in order to denote itself.

Number literals


num_lit : nonzero_dec [ dec_digit | '_' ] * num_suffix ?
        | '0' [       [ dec_digit | '_' ] + num_suffix ?
              | 'b'   [ '1' | '0' | '_' ] + int_suffix ?
              | 'x'   [ hex_digit | '-' ] + int_suffix ? ] ;

num_suffix : int_suffix | float_suffix ;

int_suffix : 'u' int_suffix_size ?
           | 'i' int_suffix_size ;
int_suffix_size : [ '8' | '1' '6' | '3' '2' | '6' '4' ] ;

float_suffix : [ exponent | '.' dec_lit exponent ? ] float_suffix_ty ? ;
float_suffix_ty : 'f' [ '3' '2' | '6' '4' ] ;
exponent : ['E' | 'e'] ['-' | '+' ] ? dec_lit ;
dec_lit : [ dec_digit | '_' ] + ;

A number literal is either an integer literal or a floating-point literal. The grammar for recognizing the two kinds of literals is mixed, as they are differentiated by suffixes.

Integer literals

An integer literal has one of three forms:

  • A decimal literal starts with a decimal digit and continues with any mixture of decimal digits and underscores.
  • A hex literal starts with the character sequence U+0030 U+0078 (0x) and continues as any mixture hex digits and underscores.
  • A binary literal starts with the character sequence U+0030 U+0062 (0b) and continues as any mixture binary digits and underscores.

An integer literal may be followed (immediately, without any spaces) by an integer suffix, which changes the type of the literal. There are two kinds of integer literal suffix:

  • The i and u suffixes give the literal type int or uint, respectively.
  • Each of the signed and unsigned machine types u8, i8, u16, i16, u32, i32, u64 and i64 give the literal the corresponding machine type.

The type of an unsuffixed integer literal is determined by type inference. If a integer type can be uniquely determined from the surrounding program context, the unsuffixed integer literal has that type. If the program context underconstrains the type, the unsuffixed integer literal's type is int; if the program context overconstrains the type, it is considered a static type error.

Examples of integer literals of various forms:

123; 0xff00;                       // type determined by program context
                                   // defaults to int in absence of type
                                   // information

123u;                              // type uint
123_u;                             // type uint
0xff_u8;                           // type u8
0b1111_1111_1001_0000_i32;         // type i32
Floating-point literals

A floating-point literal has one of two forms:

  • Two decimal literals separated by a period character U+002E (.), with an optional exponent trailing after the second decimal literal.
  • A single decimal literal followed by an exponent.

By default, a floating-point literal is of type float. A floating-point literal may be followed (immediately, without any spaces) by a floating-point suffix, which changes the type of the literal. There are three floating-point suffixes: f (for the base float type), f32, and f64 (the 32-bit and 64-bit floating point types).

Examples of floating-point literals of various forms:

123.0;                             // type float
0.1;                               // type float
3f;                                // type float
0.1f32;                            // type f32
12E+99_f64;                        // type f64
Unit and boolean literals

The unit value, the only value of the type that has the same name, is written as (). The two values of the boolean type are written true and false.

Symbols

symbol : "::" "->"
       | '#' | '[' | ']' | '(' | ')' | '{' | '}'
       | ',' | ';' ;

Symbols are a general class of printable token that play structural roles in a variety of grammar productions. They are catalogued here for completeness as the set of remaining miscellaneous printable tokens that do not otherwise appear as unary operators, binary operators, or keywords.

Paths


expr_path : ident [ "::" expr_path_tail ] + ;
expr_path_tail : '<' type_expr [ ',' type_expr ] + '>'
               | expr_path ;

type_path : ident [ type_path_tail ] + ;
type_path_tail : '<' type_expr [ ',' type_expr ] + '>'
               | "::" type_path ;

A path is a sequence of one or more path components logically separated by a namespace qualifier (::). If a path consists of only one component, it may refer to either an item or a slot in a local control scope. If a path has multiple components, it refers to an item.

Every item has a canonical path within its crate, but the path naming an item is only meaningful within a given crate. There is no global namespace across crates; an item's canonical path merely identifies it within the crate.

Two examples of simple paths consisting of only identifier components:

x;
x::y::z;

Path components are usually identifiers, but the trailing component of a path may be an angle-bracket-enclosed list of type arguments. In expression context, the type argument list is given after a final (::) namespace qualifier in order to disambiguate it from a relational expression involving the less-than symbol (<). In type expression context, the final namespace qualifier is omitted.

Two examples of paths with type arguments:

# use std::oldmap;
# fn f() {
# fn id<T:Copy>(t: T) -> T { t }
type t = oldmap::HashMap<int,~str>;  // Type arguments used in a type expression
let x = id::<int>(10);           // Type arguments used in a call expression
# }

Syntax extensions

A number of minor features of Rust are not central enough to have their own syntax, and yet are not implementable as functions. Instead, they are given names, and invoked through a consistent syntax: name!(...). Examples include:

  • fmt! : format data into a string
  • env! : look up an environment variable's value at compile time
  • stringify! : pretty-print the Rust expression given as an argument
  • proto! : define a protocol for inter-task communication
  • include! : include the Rust expression in the given file
  • include_str! : include the contents of the given file as a string
  • include_bin! : include the contents of the given file as a binary blob
  • error!, warn!, info!, debug! : provide diagnostic information.

All of the above extensions, with the exception of proto!, are expressions with values. proto! is an item, defining a new name.

Macros


expr_macro_rules : "macro_rules" '!' ident '(' macro_rule * ')'
macro_rule : '(' matcher * ')' "=>" '(' transcriber * ')' ';'
matcher : '(' matcher * ')' | '[' matcher * ']'
        | '{' matcher * '}' | '$' ident ':' ident
        | '$' '(' matcher * ')' sep_token? [ '*' | '+' ]
        | non_special_token
transcriber : '(' transcriber * ')' | '[' transcriber * ']'
            | '{' transcriber * '}' | '$' ident
            | '$' '(' transcriber * ')' sep_token? [ '*' | '+' ]
            | non_special_token

User-defined syntax extensions are called "macros", and they can be defined with the macro_rules! syntax extension. User-defined macros can currently be invoked as expressions, statements, or items.

(A sep_token is any token other than * and +. A non_special_token is any token other than a delimiter or $.)

Macro invocations are looked up by name, and each macro rule is tried in turn; the first successful match is transcribed. The matching and transcription processes are closely related, and will be described together:

Macro By Example

The macro expander matches and transcribes every token that does not begin with a $ literally, including delimiters. For parsing reasons, delimiters must be balanced, but they are otherwise not special.

In the matcher, $ name : designator matches the nonterminal in the Rust syntax named by designator. Valid designators are item, block, stmt, pat, expr, ty (type), ident, path, matchers (lhs of the => in macro rules), tt (rhs of the => in macro rules). In the transcriber, the designator is already known, and so only the name of a matched nonterminal comes after the dollar sign.

In both the matcher and transcriber, the Kleene star-like operator indicates repetition. The Kleene star operator consists of $ and parens, optionally followed by a separator token, followed by * or +. * means zero or more repetitions, + means at least one repetition. The parens are not matched or transcribed. On the matcher side, a name is bound to all of the names it matches, in a structure that mimics the structure of the repetition encountered on a successful match. The job of the transcriber is to sort that structure out.

The rules for transcription of these repetitions are called "Macro By Example". Essentially, one "layer" of repetition is discharged at a time, and all of them must be discharged by the time a name is transcribed. Therefore, ( $( $i:ident ),* ) => ( $i ) is an invalid macro, but ( $( $i:ident ),* ) => ( $( $i:ident ),* ) is acceptable (if trivial).

When Macro By Example encounters a repetition, it examines all of the $ name s that occur in its body. At the "current layer", they all must repeat the same number of times, so ( $( $i:ident ),* ; $( $j:ident ),* ) => ( $( ($i,$j) ),* ) is valid if given the argument (a,b,c ; d,e,f), but not (a,b,c ; d,e). The repetition walks through the choices at that layer in lockstep, so the former input transcribes to ( (a,d), (b,e), (c,f) ).

Nested repetitions are allowed.

Parsing limitations

The parser used by the macro system is reasonably powerful, but the parsing of Rust syntax is restricted in two ways:

  1. The parser will always parse as much as possible. If it attempts to match $i:expr [ , ] against 8 [ , ], it will attempt to parse i as an array index operation and fail. Adding a separator can solve this problem.
  2. The parser must have eliminated all ambiguity by the time it reaches a $ name : designator. This requirement most often affects name-designator pairs when they occur at the beginning of, or immediately after, a $(...)*; requiring a distinctive token in front can solve the problem.

Syntax extensions useful for the macro author

  • log_syntax! : print out the arguments at compile time
  • trace_macros! : supply true or false to enable or disable printing of the macro expansion process.
  • ident_to_str! : turn the identifier argument into a string literal
  • concat_idents! : create a new identifier by concatenating the arguments

Crates and source files

Rust is a compiled language. Its semantics obey a phase distinction between compile-time and run-time. Those semantic rules that have a static interpretation govern the success or failure of compilation. We refer to these rules as "static semantics". Semantic rules called "dynamic semantics" govern the behavior of programs at run-time. A program that fails to compile due to violation of a compile-time rule has no defined dynamic semantics; the compiler should halt with an error report, and produce no executable artifact.

The compilation model centres on artifacts called crates. Each compilation processes a single crate in source form, and if successful, produces a single crate in binary form: either an executable or a library.^[A crate is somewhat analogous to an assembly in the ECMA-335 CLI model, a library in the SML/NJ Compilation Manager, a unit in the Owens and Flatt module system, or a configuration in Mesa.]

A crate is a unit of compilation and linking, as well as versioning, distribution and runtime loading. A crate contains a tree of nested module scopes. The top level of this tree is a module that is anonymous (from the point of view of paths within the module) and any item within a crate has a canonical module path denoting its location within the crate's module tree.

The Rust compiler is always invoked with a single source file as input, and always produces a single output crate. The processing of that source file may result in other source files being loaded as modules. Source files typically have the extension .rs but, by convention, source files that represent crates have the extension .rc, called crate files.

A Rust source file describes a module, the name and location of which -- in the module tree of the current crate -- are defined from outside the source file: either by an explicit mod_item in a referencing source file, or by the name of the crate itself.

Each source file contains a sequence of zero or more item definitions, and may optionally begin with any number of attributes that apply to the containing module. Atributes on the anonymous crate module define important metadata that influences the behavior of the compiler.

// Linkage attributes
#[ link(name = "projx",
        vers = "2.5",
        uuid = "9cccc5d5-aceb-4af5-8285-811211826b82") ];

// Additional metadata attributes
#[ desc = "Project X" ];
#[ license = "BSD" ];
#[ author = "Jane Doe" ];

// Specify the output type
#[ crate_type = "lib" ];

// Turn on a warning
#[ warn(non_camel_case_types) ];

A crate that contains a main function can be compiled to an executable. If a main function is present, its return type must be unit and it must take no arguments.

Items and attributes

Crates contain items, each of which may have some number of attributes attached to it.

Items

item : mod_item | fn_item | type_item | enum_item
     | const_item | trait_item | impl_item | foreign_mod_item ;

An item is a component of a crate; some module items can be defined in crate files, but most are defined in source files. Items are organized within a crate by a nested set of modules. Every crate has a single "outermost" anonymous module; all further items within the crate have paths within the module tree of the crate.

Items are entirely determined at compile-time, remain constant during execution, and may reside in read-only memory.

There are several kinds of item:

Some items form an implicit scope for the declaration of sub-items. In other words, within a function or module, declarations of items can (in many cases) be mixed with the statements, control blocks, and similar artifacts that otherwise compose the item body. The meaning of these scoped items is the same as if the item was declared outside the scope -- it is still a static item -- except that the item's path name within the module namespace is qualified by the name of the enclosing item, or is private to the enclosing item (in the case of functions). The grammar specifies the exact locations in which sub-item declarations may appear.

Type Parameters

All items except modules may be parameterized by type. Type parameters are given as a comma-separated list of identifiers enclosed in angle brackets (<...>), after the name of the item and before its definition. The type parameters of an item are considered "part of the name", not part of the type of the item. A referencing path must (in principle) provide type arguments as a list of comma-separated types enclosed within angle brackets, in order to refer to the type-parameterized item. In practice, the type-inference system can usually infer such argument types from context. There are no general type-parametric types, only type-parametric items. That is, Rust has no notion of type abstraction: there are no first-class "forall" types.

Modules

mod_item : "mod" ident ( ';' | '{' mod '}' );
mod : [ view_item | item ] * ;

A module is a container for zero or more view items and zero or more items. The view items manage the visibility of the items defined within the module, as well as the visibility of names from outside the module when referenced from inside the module.

A module item is a module, surrounded in braces, named, and prefixed with the keyword mod. A module item introduces a new, named module into the tree of modules making up a crate. Modules can nest arbitrarily.

An example of a module:

mod math {
    type complex = (f64, f64);
    fn sin(f: f64) -> f64 {
        ...
# die!();
    }
    fn cos(f: f64) -> f64 {
        ...
# die!();
    }
    fn tan(f: f64) -> f64 {
        ...
# die!();
    }
}

Modules and types share the same namespace. Declaring a named type that has the same name as a module in scope is forbidden: that is, a type definition, trait, struct, enumeration, or type parameter can't shadow the name of a module in scope, or vice versa.

A module without a body is loaded from an external file, by default with the same name as the module, plus the .rs extension. When a nested submodule is loaded from an external file, it is loaded from a subdirectory path that mirrors the module hierarchy.

// Load the `vec` module from `vec.rs`
mod vec;

mod task {
    // Load the `local_data` module from `task/local_data.rs`
    mod local_data;
}

The directories and files used for loading external file modules can be influenced with the path attribute.

#[path = "task_files"]
mod task {
    // Load the `local_data` module from `task_files/tls.rs`
    #[path = "tls.rs"]
    mod local_data;
}

View items

view_item : extern_mod_decl | use_decl ;

A view item manages the namespace of a module. View items do not define new items, but rather, simply change other items' visibility. There are several kinds of view item:

Extern mod declarations
extern_mod_decl : "extern" "mod" ident [ '(' link_attrs ')' ] ? ;
link_attrs : link_attr [ ',' link_attrs ] + ;
link_attr : ident '=' literal ;

An extern mod declaration specifies a dependency on an external crate. The external crate is then bound into the declaring scope as the ident provided in the extern_mod_decl.

The external crate is resolved to a specific soname at compile time, and a runtime linkage requirement to that soname is passed to the linker for loading at runtime. The soname is resolved at compile time by scanning the compiler's library path and matching the link_attrs provided in the use_decl against any #link attributes that were declared on the external crate when it was compiled. If no link_attrs are provided, a default name attribute is assumed, equal to the ident given in the use_decl.

Three examples of extern mod declarations:

extern mod pcre (uuid = "54aba0f8-a7b1-4beb-92f1-4cf625264841");

extern mod std; // equivalent to: extern mod std ( name = "std" );

extern mod ruststd (name = "std"); // linking to 'std' under another name
Use declarations
use_decl : "pub"? "use" ident [ '=' path
                          | "::" path_glob ] ;

path_glob : ident [ "::" path_glob ] ?
          | '*'
          | '{' ident [ ',' ident ] * '}'

A use declaration creates one or more local name bindings synonymous with some other path. Usually a use declaration is used to shorten the path required to refer to a module item.

Note: unlike many languages, Rust's use declarations do not declare linkage-dependency with external crates. Linkage dependencies are independently declared with extern mod declarations.

Use declarations support a number of "convenience" notations:

  • Rebinding the target name as a new local name, using the syntax use x = p::q::r;.
  • Simultaneously binding a list of paths differing only in final element, using the glob-like brace syntax use a::b::{c,d,e,f};
  • Binding all paths matching a given prefix, using the glob-like asterisk syntax use a::b::*;

An example of use declarations:

use foo = core::info;
use core::float::sin;
use core::str::{slice, to_upper};
use core::option::Some;

fn main() {
    // Equivalent to 'log(core::info, core::float::sin(1.0));'
    log(foo, sin(1.0));

    // Equivalent to 'log(core::info, core::option::Some(1.0));'
    log(info, Some(1.0));

    // Equivalent to 'log(core::info,
    //                    core::str::to_upper(core::str::slice("foo", 0, 1)));'
    log(info, to_upper(slice("foo", 0, 1)));
}

Like items, use declarations are private to the containing module, by default. Also like items, a use declaration can be public, if qualified by the pub keyword. Such a use declaration serves to re-export a name. A public use declaration can therefore be used to redirect some public name to a different target definition, even a definition with a private canonical path, inside a different module. If a sequence of such redirections form a cycle or cannot be unambiguously resolved, they represent a compile-time error.

An example of re-exporting:

# fn main() { }
mod quux {
    pub mod foo {
        pub fn bar() { }
        pub fn baz() { }
    }

    pub use quux::foo::*;
}

In this example, the module quux re-exports all of the public names defined in foo.

Also note that the paths contained in use items are relative to the crate root; so, in the previous example, the use refers to quux::foo::*, and not simply to foo::*.

Functions

A function item defines a sequence of statements and an optional final expression, along with a name and a set of parameters. Functions are declared with the keyword fn. Functions declare a set of input slots as parameters, through which the caller passes arguments into the function, and an output slot through which the function passes results back to the caller.

A function may also be copied into a first class value, in which case the value has the corresponding function type, and can be used otherwise exactly as a function item (with a minor additional cost of calling the function indirectly).

Every control path in a function logically ends with a return expression or a diverging expression. If the outermost block of a function has a value-producing expression in its final-expression position, that expression is interpreted as an implicit return expression applied to the final-expression.

An example of a function:

fn add(x: int, y: int) -> int {
    return x + y;
}

As with let bindings, function arguments are irrefutable patterns, so any pattern that is valid in a let binding is also valid as an argument.

fn first((value, _): (int, int)) -> int { value }

Generic functions

A generic function allows one or more parameterized types to appear in its signature. Each type parameter must be explicitly declared, in an angle-bracket-enclosed, comma-separated list following the function name.

fn iter<T>(seq: &[T], f: fn(T)) {
    for seq.each |elt| { f(elt); }
}
fn map<T, U>(seq: &[T], f: fn(T) -> U) -> ~[U] {
    let mut acc = ~[];
    for seq.each |elt| { acc.push(f(elt)); }
    acc
}

Inside the function signature and body, the name of the type parameter can be used as a type name.

When a generic function is referenced, its type is instantiated based on the context of the reference. For example, calling the iter function defined above on [1, 2] will instantiate type parameter T with int, and require the closure parameter to have type fn(int).

Since a parameter type is opaque to the generic function, the set of operations that can be performed on it is limited. Values of parameter type can always be moved, but they can only be copied when the parameter is given a Copy bound.

fn id<T: Copy>(x: T) -> T { x }

Similarly, trait bounds can be specified for type parameters to allow methods with that trait to be called on values of that type.

Unsafe functions

Unsafe functions are those containing unsafe operations that are not contained in an unsafe block. Such a function must be prefixed with the keyword unsafe.

Unsafe operations are those that potentially violate the memory-safety guarantees of Rust's static semantics. Specifically, the following operations are considered unsafe:

Unsafe blocks

A block of code can also be prefixed with the unsafe keyword, to permit a sequence of unsafe operations in an otherwise-safe function. This facility exists because the static semantics of Rust are a necessary approximation of the dynamic semantics. When a programmer has sufficient conviction that a sequence of unsafe operations is actually safe, they can encapsulate that sequence (taken as a whole) within an unsafe block. The compiler will consider uses of such code "safe", to the surrounding context.

Pure functions

A pure function declaration is identical to a function declaration, except that it is declared with the additional keyword pure. In addition, the typechecker checks the body of a pure function with a restricted set of typechecking rules. A pure function may only modify data owned by its own stack frame. So, a pure function may modify a local variable allocated on the stack, but not a mutable reference that it takes as an argument. A pure function may only call other pure functions, not general functions.

An example of a pure function:

pure fn lt_42(x: int) -> bool {
    return (x < 42);
}

Pure functions may call other pure functions:

pure fn pure_length<T>(ls: List<T>) -> uint { ... }

pure fn nonempty_list<T>(ls: List<T>) -> bool { pure_length(ls) > 0u }

These purity-checking rules approximate the concept of referential transparency: that a call-expression could be rewritten with the literal-expression of its return value, without changing the meaning of the program. Since they are an approximation, sometimes these rules are too restrictive. Rust allows programmers to violate these rules using unsafe blocks, which we already saw. As with any unsafe block, those that violate static purity carry transfer the burden of safety-proof from the compiler to the programmer. Programmers should exercise caution when breaking such rules.

For more details on purity, see the borrowed pointer tutorial.

Diverging functions

A special kind of function can be declared with a ! character where the output slot type would normally be. For example:

fn my_err(s: &str) -> ! {
    log(info, s);
    die!();
}

We call such functions "diverging" because they never return a value to the caller. Every control path in a diverging function must end with a fail!() or a call to another diverging function on every control path. The ! annotation does not denote a type. Rather, the result type of a diverging function is a special type called \bot ("bottom") that unifies with any type. Rust has no syntax for \bot.

It might be necessary to declare a diverging function because as mentioned previously, the typechecker checks that every control path in a function ends with a return or diverging expression. So, if my_err were declared without the ! annotation, the following code would not typecheck:

# fn my_err(s: &str) -> ! { die!() }

fn f(i: int) -> int {
   if i == 42 {
     return 42;
   }
   else {
     my_err("Bad number!");
   }
}

This will not compile without the ! annotation on my_err, since the else branch of the conditional in f does not return an int, as required by the signature of f. Adding the ! annotation to my_err informs the typechecker that, should control ever enter my_err, no further type judgments about f need to hold, since control will never resume in any context that relies on those judgments. Thus the return type on f only needs to reflect the if branch of the conditional.

Extern functions

Extern functions are part of Rust's foreign function interface, providing the opposite functionality to foreign modules. Whereas foreign modules allow Rust code to call foreign code, extern functions with bodies defined in Rust code can be called by foreign code. They are defined the same as any other Rust function, except that they are prepended with the extern keyword.

extern fn new_vec() -> ~[int] { ~[] }

Extern functions may not be called from Rust code, but their value may be taken as a raw u8 pointer.

# extern fn new_vec() -> ~[int] { ~[] }
let fptr: *u8 = new_vec;

The primary motivation of extern functions is to create callbacks for foreign functions that expect to receive function pointers.

Type definitions

A type definition defines a new name for an existing type. Type definitions are declared with the keyword type. Every value has a single, specific type; the type-specified aspects of a value include:

  • Whether the value is composed of sub-values or is indivisible.
  • Whether the value represents textual or numerical information.
  • Whether the value represents integral or floating-point information.
  • The sequence of memory operations required to access the value.
  • The kind of the type.

For example, the type (u8, u8) defines the set of immutable values that are composite pairs, each containing two unsigned 8-bit integers accessed by pattern-matching and laid out in memory with the x component preceding the y component.

Structures

A structure is a nominal structure type defined with the keyword struct.

An example of a struct item and its use:

struct Point {x: int, y: int}
let p = Point {x: 10, y: 11};
let px: int = p.x;

A tuple structure is a nominal tuple type, also defined with the keyword struct. For example:

struct Point(int, int);
let p = Point(10, 11);
let px: int = match p { Point(x, _) => x };

Enumerations

An enumeration is a simultaneous definition of a nominal enumerated type as well as a set of constructors, that can be used to create or pattern-match values of the corresponding enumerated type.

Enumerations are declared with the keyword enum.

An example of an enum item and its use:

enum Animal {
  Dog,
  Cat
}

let mut a: Animal = Dog;
a = Cat;

Enumeration constructors can have either named or unnamed fields:

enum Animal {
    Dog (~str, float),
    Cat { name: ~str, weight: float }
}

let mut a: Animal = Dog(~"Cocoa", 37.2);
a = Cat{ name: ~"Spotty", weight: 2.7 };

In this example, Cat is a struct-like enum variant, whereas Dog is simply called an enum variant.

Constants

const_item : "const" ident ':' type '=' expr ';' ;

A constant is a named value stored in read-only memory in a crate. The value bound to a constant is evaluated at compile time. Constants are declared with the const keyword. A constant item must have an expression giving its definition. The definition expression of a constant is limited to expression forms that can be evaluated at compile time.

Constants must be explicitly typed. The type may be bool, char, a number, or a type derived from those primitive types. The derived types are borrowed pointers, static arrays, tuples, and structs.

const bit1: uint = 1 << 0;
const bit2: uint = 1 << 1;

const bits: [uint * 2] = [bit1, bit2];
const string: &str = "bitstring";

struct BitsNStrings {
    mybits: [uint *2],
    mystring: &str
}

const bits_n_strings: BitsNStrings = BitsNStrings {
    mybits: bits,
    mystring: string
};

Traits

A trait describes a set of method types.

Traits can include default implementations of methods, written in terms of some unknown self type; the self type may either be completely unspecified, or constrained by some other trait.

Traits are implemented for specific types through separate implementations.

# type Surface = int;
# type BoundingBox = int;

trait Shape {
    fn draw(Surface);
    fn bounding_box() -> BoundingBox;
}

This defines a trait with two methods. All values that have implementations of this trait in scope can have their draw and bounding_box methods called, using value.bounding_box() syntax.

Type parameters can be specified for a trait to make it generic. These appear after the trait name, using the same syntax used in generic functions.

trait Seq<T> {
   fn len() -> uint;
   fn elt_at(n: uint) -> T;
   fn iter(fn(T));
}

Generic functions may use traits as bounds on their type parameters. This will have two effects: only types that have the trait may instantiate the parameter, and within the generic function, the methods of the trait can be called on values that have the parameter's type. For example:

# type Surface = int;
# trait Shape { fn draw(Surface); }

fn draw_twice<T: Shape>(surface: Surface, sh: T) {
    sh.draw(surface);
    sh.draw(surface);
}

Traits also define an object type with the same name as the trait. Values of this type are created by casting pointer values (pointing to a type for which an implementation of the given trait is in scope) to pointers to the trait name, used as a type.

# trait Shape { }
# impl int: Shape { }
# let mycircle = 0;

let myshape: Shape = @mycircle as @Shape;

The resulting value is a managed box containing the value that was cast, along with information that identifies the methods of the implementation that was used. Values with a trait type can have methods called on them, for any method in the trait, and can be used to instantiate type parameters that are bounded by the trait.

Trait methods may be static, which means that they lack a self argument. This means that they can only be called with function call syntax (f(x)) and not method call syntax (obj.f()). The way to refer to the name of a static method is to qualify it with the trait name, treating the trait name like a module. For example:

trait Num {
    static pure fn from_int(n: int) -> Self;
}
impl float: Num {
    static pure fn from_int(n: int) -> float { n as float }
}
let x: float = Num::from_int(42);

Traits may inherit from other traits. For example, in

trait Shape { fn area() -> float; }
trait Circle : Shape { fn radius() -> float; }

the syntax Circle : Shape means that types that implement Circle must also have an implementation for Shape. Multiple supertraits are separated by spaces, trait Circle : Shape Eq { }. In an implementation of Circle for a given type T, methods can refer to Shape methods, since the typechecker checks that any type with an implementation of Circle also has an implementation of Shape.

In type-parameterized functions, methods of the supertrait may be called on values of subtrait-bound type parameters. Refering to the previous example of trait Circle : Shape:

# trait Shape { fn area() -> float; }
# trait Circle : Shape { fn radius() -> float; }
fn radius_times_area<T: Circle>(c: T) -> float {
    // `c` is both a Circle and a Shape
    c.radius() * c.area()
}

Likewise, supertrait methods may also be called on trait objects.

# trait Shape { fn area() -> float; }
# trait Circle : Shape { fn radius() -> float; }
# impl int: Shape { fn area() -> float { 0.0 } }
# impl int: Circle { fn radius() -> float { 0.0 } }
# let mycircle = 0;

let mycircle: Circle = @mycircle as @Circle;
let nonsense = mycircle.radius() * mycircle.area();

Implementations

An implementation is an item that implements a trait for a specific type.

Implementations are defined with the keyword impl.

# type Point = {x: float, y: float};
# type Surface = int;
# type BoundingBox = {x: float, y: float, width: float, height: float};
# trait Shape { fn draw(Surface); fn bounding_box() -> BoundingBox; }
# fn do_draw_circle(s: Surface, c: Circle) { }

type Circle = {radius: float, center: Point};

impl Circle: Shape {
    fn draw(s: Surface) { do_draw_circle(s, self); }
    fn bounding_box() -> BoundingBox {
        let r = self.radius;
        {x: self.center.x - r, y: self.center.y - r,
         width: 2.0 * r, height: 2.0 * r}
    }
}

It is possible to define an implementation without referring to a trait. The methods in such an implementation can only be used statically (as direct calls on the values of the type that the implementation targets). In such an implementation, the type after the colon is omitted. Such implementations are limited to nominal types (enums, structs), and the implementation must appear in the same module or a sub-module as the self type.

When a trait is specified in an impl, all methods declared as part of the trait must be implemented, with matching types and type parameter counts.

An implementation can take type parameters, which can be different from the type parameters taken by the trait it implements. Implementation parameters are written after after the impl keyword.

# trait Seq<T> { }

impl<T> ~[T]: Seq<T> {
   ...
}
impl u32: Seq<bool> {
   /* Treat the integer as a sequence of bits */
}

Foreign modules

foreign_mod_item : "extern mod" ident '{' foreign_mod '} ;
foreign_mod : [ foreign_fn ] * ;

Foreign modules form the basis for Rust's foreign function interface. A foreign module describes functions in external, non-Rust libraries. Functions within foreign modules are declared in the same way as other Rust functions, with the exception that they may not have a body and are instead terminated by a semicolon.

# use libc::{c_char, FILE};
# #[nolink]

extern mod c {
    fn fopen(filename: *c_char, mode: *c_char) -> *FILE;
}

Functions within foreign modules may be called by Rust code, just like functions defined in Rust. The Rust compiler automatically translates between the Rust ABI and the foreign ABI.

The name of the foreign module has special meaning to the Rust compiler in that it will treat the module name as the name of a library to link to, performing the linking as appropriate for the target platform. The name given for the foreign module will be transformed in a platform-specific way to determine the name of the library. For example, on Linux the name of the foreign module is prefixed with 'lib' and suffixed with '.so', so the foreign mod 'rustrt' would be linked to a library named 'librustrt.so'.

A number of attributes control the behavior of foreign modules.

By default foreign modules assume that the library they are calling use the standard C "cdecl" ABI. Other ABIs may be specified using the abi attribute as in

// Interface to the Windows API
#[abi = "stdcall"]
extern mod kernel32 { }

The link_name attribute allows the default library naming behavior to be overridden by explicitly specifying the name of the library.

#[link_name = "crypto"]
extern mod mycrypto { }

The nolink attribute tells the Rust compiler not to do any linking for the foreign module. This is particularly useful for creating foreign modules for libc, which tends to not follow standard library naming conventions and is linked to all Rust programs anyway.

Attributes

attribute : '#' '[' attr_list ']' ;
attr_list : attr [ ',' attr_list ]*
attr : ident [ '=' literal
             | '(' attr_list ')' ] ? ;

Static entities in Rust -- crates, modules and items -- may have attributes applied to them. ^[Attributes in Rust are modeled on Attributes in ECMA-335, C#] An attribute is a general, free-form metadatum that is interpreted according to name, convention, and language and compiler version. Attributes may appear as any of

  • A single identifier, the attribute name
  • An identifier followed by the equals sign '=' and a literal, providing a key/value pair
  • An identifier followed by a parenthesized list of sub-attribute arguments

Attributes terminated by a semi-colon apply to the entity that the attribute is declared within. Attributes that are not terminated by a semi-colon apply to the next entity.

An example of attributes:

// General metadata applied to the enclosing module or crate.
#[license = "BSD"];

// A function marked as a unit test
#[test]
fn test_foo() {
  ...
}

// A conditionally-compiled module
#[cfg(target_os="linux")]
mod bar {
  ...
}

// A lint attribute used to suppress a warning/error
#[allow(non_camel_case_types)]
pub type int8_t = i8;

Note: In future versions of Rust, user-provided extensions to the compiler will be able to interpret attributes. When this facility is provided, the compiler will distinguish between language-reserved and user-available attributes.

At present, only the Rust compiler interprets attributes, so all attribute names are effectively reserved. Some significant attributes include:

  • The doc attribute, for documenting code in-place.
  • The cfg attribute, for conditional-compilation by build-configuration.
  • The link attribute, for describing linkage metadata for a crate.
  • The test attribute, for marking functions as unit tests.
  • The allow, warn, forbid, and deny attributes, for controling lint checks. Lint checks supported by the compiler can be found via rustc -W help.

Other attributes may be added or removed during development of the language.

Statements and expressions

Rust is primarily an expression language. This means that most forms of value-producing or effect-causing evaluation are directed by the uniform syntax category of expressions. Each kind of expression can typically nest within each other kind of expression, and rules for evaluation of expressions involve specifying both the value produced by the expression and the order in which its sub-expressions are themselves evaluated.

In contrast, statements in Rust serve mostly to contain and explicitly sequence expression evaluation.

Statements

A statement is a component of a block, which is in turn a component of an outer expression or function.

Rust has two kinds of statement: declaration statements and expression statements.

Declaration statements

A declaration statement is one that introduces one or more names into the enclosing statement block. The declared names may denote new slots or new items.

Item declarations

An item declaration statement has a syntactic form identical to an item declaration within a module. Declaring an item -- a function, enumeration, type, constant, trait, implementation or module -- locally within a statement block is simply a way of restricting its scope to a narrow region containing all of its uses; it is otherwise identical in meaning to declaring the item outside the statement block.

Note: there is no implicit capture of the function's dynamic environment when declaring a function-local item.

Slot declarations

let_decl : "let" pat [':' type ] ? [ init ] ? ';' ;
init : [ '=' ] expr ;

A slot declaration introduces a new set of slots, given by a pattern. The pattern may be followed by a type annotation, and/or an initializer expression. When no type annotation is given, the compiler will infer the type, or signal an error if insufficient type information is available for definite inference. Any slots introduced by a slot declaration are visible from the point of declaration until the end of the enclosing block scope.

Expression statements

An expression statement is one that evaluates an expression and drops its result. The purpose of an expression statement is often to cause the side effects of the expression's evaluation.

Expressions

An expression plays the dual roles of causing side effects and producing a value. Expressions are said to evaluate to a value, and the side effects are caused during evaluation. Many expressions contain sub-expressions as operands; the definition of each kind of expression dictates whether or not, and in which order, it will evaluate its sub-expressions, and how the expression's value derives from the value of its sub-expressions.

In this way, the structure of execution -- both the overall sequence of observable side effects and the final produced value -- is dictated by the structure of expressions. Blocks themselves are expressions, so the nesting sequence of block, statement, expression, and block can repeatedly nest to an arbitrary depth.

Lvalues, rvalues and temporaries

Expressions are divided into two main categories: lvalues and rvalues. Likewise within each expression, sub-expressions may occur in lvalue context or rvalue context. The evaluation of an expression depends both on its own category and the context it occurs within.

Path, field and index expressions are lvalues. All other expressions are rvalues.

The left operand of an assignment, binary move or compound-assignment expression is an lvalue context, as is the single operand of a unary borrow, or move expression, and both operands of a swap expression. All other expression contexts are rvalue contexts.

When an lvalue is evaluated in an lvalue context, it denotes a memory location; when evaluated in an rvalue context, it denotes the value held in that memory location.

When an rvalue is used in lvalue context, a temporary un-named lvalue is created and used instead. A temporary's lifetime equals the largest lifetime of any borrowed pointer that points to it.

Moved and copied types

When a local variable is used as an rvalue the variable will either be moved or copied, depending on its type. For types that contain mutable fields or owning pointers, the variable is moved. All other types are copied.

Literal expressions

A literal expression consists of one of the literal forms described earlier. It directly describes a number, character, string, boolean value, or the unit value.

();        // unit type
"hello";   // string type
'5';       // character type
5;         // integer type

Path expressions

A path used as an expression context denotes either a local variable or an item. Path expressions are lvalues.

Tuple expressions

Tuples are written by enclosing two or more comma-separated expressions in parentheses. They are used to create tuple-typed values.

(0f, 4.5f);
("a", 4u, true);

Structure expressions

struct_expr : expr_path '{' ident ':' expr
                      [ ',' ident ':' expr ] *
                      [ ".." expr ] '}' |
              expr_path '(' expr
                      [ ',' expr ] * ')'

There are several forms of structure expressions. A structure expression consists of the path of a structure item, followed by a brace-enclosed list of one or more comma-separated name-value pairs, providing the field values of a new instance of the structure. A field name can be any identifier, and is separated from its value expression by a colon. To indicate that a field is mutable, the mut keyword is written before its name.

A tuple structure expression constists of the path of a structure item, followed by a parenthesized list of one or more comma-separated expressions (in other words, the path of a structured item followed by a tuple expression). The structure item must be a tuple structure item.

The following are examples of structure expressions:

# struct Point { x: float, y: float }
# struct TuplePoint(float, float);
# mod game { pub struct User { name: &str, age: uint, mut score: uint } }
# use game;
Point {x: 10f, y: 20f};
TuplePoint(10f, 20f);
let u = game::User {name: "Joe", age: 35u, mut score: 100_000};

A structure expression forms a new value of the named structure type.

A structure expression can terminate with the syntax .. followed by an expression to denote a functional update. The expression following .. (the base) must be of the same structure type as the new structure type being formed. A new structure will be created, of the same type as the base expression, with the given values for the fields that were explicitly specified, and the values in the base record for all other fields.

# struct Point3d { x: int, y: int, z: int }
let base = Point3d {x: 1, y: 2, z: 3};
Point3d {y: 0, z: 10, .. base};

Record expressions

rec_expr : '{' ident ':' expr
               [ ',' ident ':' expr ] *
               [ ".." expr ] '}'

Note: In future versions of Rust, record expressions and record types will be removed.

A record expression is one or more comma-separated name-value pairs enclosed by braces. A fieldname can be any identifier, and is separated from its value expression by a colon. To indicate that a field is mutable, the mut keyword is written before its name.

{x: 10f, y: 20f};
{name: "Joe", age: 35u, score: 100_000};
{ident: "X", mut count: 0u};

The order of the fields in a record expression is significant, and determines the type of the resulting value. {a: u8, b: u8} and {b: u8, a: u8} are two different fields.

A record expression can terminate with the syntax .. followed by an expression to denote a functional update. The expression following .. (the base) must be of a record type that includes at least all the fields mentioned in the record expression. A new record will be created, of the same type as the base expression, with the given values for the fields that were explicitly specified, and the values in the base record for all other fields. The ordering of the fields in such a record expression is not significant.

let base = {x: 1, y: 2, z: 3};
{y: 0, z: 10, .. base};

Method-call expressions

method_call_expr : expr '.' ident paren_expr_list ;

A method call consists of an expression followed by a single dot, an identifier, and a parenthesized expression-list. Method calls are resolved to methods on specific traits, either statically dispatching to a method if the exact self-type of the left-hand-side is known, or dynamically dispatching if the left-hand-side expression is an indirect object type.

Field expressions

field_expr : expr '.' ident

A field expression consists of an expression followed by a single dot and an identifier, when not immediately followed by a parenthesized expression-list (the latter is a method call expression). A field expression denotes a field of a structure or record.

myrecord.myfield;
{a: 10, b: 20}.a;

A field access on a record is an lvalue referring to the value of that field. When the field is mutable, it can be assigned to.

When the type of the expression to the left of the dot is a pointer to a record or structure, it is automatically derferenced to make the field access possible.

Vector expressions

vec_expr : '[' "mut"? vec_elems? ']'

vec_elems : [expr [',' expr]*] | [expr ',' ".." expr]

A vector expression is written by enclosing zero or more comma-separated expressions of uniform type in square brackets.

[1, 2, 3, 4];
["a", "b", "c", "d"];
[0, ..128];             // vector with 128 zeros
[0u8, 0u8, 0u8, 0u8];

Index expressions

idx_expr : expr '[' expr ']'

Vector-typed expressions can be indexed by writing a square-bracket-enclosed expression (the index) after them. When the vector is mutable, the resulting lvalue can be assigned to.

Indices are zero-based, and may be of any integral type. Vector access is bounds-checked at run-time. When the check fails, it will put the task in a failing state.

# do task::spawn_unlinked {

([1, 2, 3, 4])[0];
(["a", "b"])[10]; // fails

# }

Unary operator expressions

Rust defines six symbolic unary operators, in addition to the unary copy and move operators. They are all written as prefix operators, before the expression they apply to.

- : Negation. May only be applied to numeric types. * : Dereference. When applied to a pointer it denotes the pointed-to location. For pointers to mutable locations, the resulting lvalue can be assigned to. For enums that have only a single variant, containing a single parameter, the dereference operator accesses this parameter. ! : Logical negation. On the boolean type, this flips between true and false. On integer types, this inverts the individual bits in the two's complement representation of the value. @ and ~ : Boxing operators. Allocate a box to hold the value they are applied to, and store the value in it. @ creates a managed box, whereas ~ creates an owned box. & : Borrow operator. Returns a borrowed pointer, pointing to its operand. The operand of a borrowed pointer is statically proven to outlive the resulting pointer. If the borrow-checker cannot prove this, it is a compilation error.

Binary operator expressions

binop_expr : expr binop expr ;

Binary operators expressions are given in terms of operator precedence.

Arithmetic operators

Binary arithmetic expressions are syntactic sugar for calls to built-in traits, defined in the core::ops module of the core library. This means that arithmetic operators can be overridden for user-defined types. The default meaning of the operators on standard types is given here.

+ : Addition and vector/string concatenation. Calls the add method on the core::ops::Add trait. - : Subtraction. Calls the sub method on the core::ops::Sub trait. * : Multiplication. Calls the mul method on the core::ops::Mul trait. / : Division. Calls the div method on the core::ops::Div trait. % : Modulo (a.k.a. "remainder"). Calls the modulo method on the core::ops::Modulo trait.

Bitwise operators

Bitwise operators are, like the arithmetic operators, syntactic sugar for calls to built-in traits. This means that bitwise operators can be overridden for user-defined types. The default meaning of the operators on standard types is given here.

& : And. Calls the bitand method on the core::ops::BitAnd trait. | : Inclusive or. Calls the bitor method on the core::ops::BitOr trait. ^ : Exclusive or. Calls the bitxor method on the core::ops::BitXor trait. << : Logical left shift. Calls the shl method on the core::ops::Shl trait. >> : Logical right shift. Calls the shr method on the core::ops::Shr trait.

Lazy boolean operators

The operators || and && may be applied to operands of boolean type. The first performs the 'or' operation, and the second the 'and' operation. They differ from | and & in that the right-hand operand is only evaluated when the left-hand operand does not already determine the outcome of the expression. That is, || only evaluates its right-hand operand when the left-hand operand evaluates to false, and && only when it evaluates to true.

Comparison operators

Comparison operators are, like the arithmetic operators, and bitwise operators, syntactic sugar for calls to built-in traits. This means that comparison operators can be overridden for user-defined types. The default meaning of the operators on standard types is given here.

== : Equal to. Calls the eq method on the core::cmp::Eq trait. != : Unequal to. Calls the ne method on the core::cmp::Eq trait. < : Less than. Calls the lt method on the core::cmp::Ord trait. > : Greater than. Calls the gt method on the core::cmp::Ord trait. <= : Less than or equal. Calls the le method on the core::cmp::Ord trait. >= : Greater than or equal. Calls the ge method on the core::cmp::Ord trait.

Type cast expressions

A type cast expression is denoted with the binary operator as.

Executing an as expression casts the value on the left-hand side to the type on the right-hand side.

A numeric value can be cast to any numeric type. A raw pointer value can be cast to or from any integral type or raw pointer type. Any other cast is unsupported and will fail to compile.

An example of an as expression:

# fn sum(v: &[float]) -> float { 0.0 }
# fn len(v: &[float]) -> int { 0 }

fn avg(v: &[float]) -> float {
  let sum: float = sum(v);
  let sz: float = len(v) as float;
  return sum / sz;
}

Swap expressions

A swap expression consists of an lvalue followed by a bi-directional arrow (<->) and another lvalue.

Evaluating a swap expression causes, as a side effect, the values held in the left-hand-side and right-hand-side lvalues to be exchanged indivisibly.

Evaluating a swap expression neither changes reference counts, nor deeply copies any owned structure pointed to by the moved rvalue. Instead, the swap expression represents an indivisible exchange of ownership, between the right-hand-side and the left-hand-side of the expression. No allocation or destruction is entailed.

An example of three different swap expressions:

# let mut x = &mut [0];
# let mut a = &mut [0];
# let i = 0;
# let y = {mut z: 0};
# let b = {mut c: 0};

x <-> a;
x[i] <-> a[i];
y.z <-> b.c;

Assignment expressions

An assignment expression consists of an lvalue expression followed by an equals sign (=) and an rvalue expression.

Evaluating an assignment expression either copies or moves its right-hand operand to its left-hand operand.

# let mut x = 0;
# let y = 0;

x = y;

Compound assignment expressions

The +, -, *, /, %, &, |, ^, <<, and >> operators may be composed with the = operator. The expression lval OP= val is equivalent to lval = lval OP val. For example, x = x + 1 may be written as x += 1.

Any such expression always has the unit type.

Operator precedence

The precedence of Rust binary operators is ordered as follows, going from strong to weak:

* / %
as
+ -
<< >>
&
^
|
< > <= >=
== !=
&&
||
= <->

Operators at the same precedence level are evaluated left-to-right.

Grouped expressions

An expression enclosed in parentheses evaluates to the result of the enclosed expression. Parentheses can be used to explicitly specify evaluation order within an expression.

paren_expr : '(' expr ')' ;

An example of a parenthesized expression:

let x = (2 + 3) * 4;

Unary copy expressions

copy_expr : "copy" expr ;

A unary copy expression consists of the unary copy operator applied to some argument expression.

Evaluating a copy expression first evaluates the argument expression, then copies the resulting value, allocating any memory necessary to hold the new copy.

Managed boxes (type @) are, as usual, shallow-copied, as are raw and borrowed pointers. Owned boxes, owned vectors and similar owned types are deep-copied.

Since the binary assignment operator = performs a copy or move implicitly, the unary copy operator is typically only used to cause an argument to a function to be copied and passed by value.

An example of a copy expression:

fn mutate(mut vec: ~[int]) {
   vec[0] = 10;
}

let v = ~[1,2,3];

mutate(copy v);   // Pass a copy

assert v[0] == 1; // Original was not modified

Unary move expressions

move_expr : "move" expr ;

A unary move expression is similar to a unary copy expression, except that it can only be applied to a local variable, and it performs a move on its operand, rather than a copy. That is, the memory location denoted by its operand is de-initialized after evaluation, and the resulting value is a shallow copy of the operand, even if the operand is an owning type.

Note: In future versions of Rust, move may be removed as a separate operator; moves are now automatically performed for most cases move would be appropriate.

Call expressions

expr_list : [ expr [ ',' expr ]* ] ? ;
paren_expr_list : '(' expr_list ')' ;
call_expr : expr paren_expr_list ;

A call expression invokes a function, providing zero or more input slots and an optional reference slot to serve as the function's output, bound to the lval on the right hand side of the call. If the function eventually returns, then the expression completes.

An example of a call expression:

# fn add(x: int, y: int) -> int { 0 }

let x: int = add(1, 2);

Lambda expressions

ident_list : [ ident [ ',' ident ]* ] ? ;
lambda_expr : '|' ident_list '|' expr ;

A lambda expression (a.k.a. "anonymous function expression") defines a function and denotes it as a value, in a single expression. Lambda expressions are written by prepending a list of identifiers, surrounded by pipe symbols (|), to an expression.

A lambda expression denotes a function mapping parameters to the expression to the right of the ident_list. The identifiers in the ident_list are the parameters to the function, with types inferred from context.

Lambda expressions are most useful when passing functions as arguments to other functions, as an abbreviation for defining and capturing a separate fucntion.

Significantly, lambda expressions capture their environment, which regular function definitions do not.

The exact type of capture depends on the function type inferred for the lambda expression; in the simplest and least-expensive form, the environment is captured by reference, effectively borrowing pointers to all outer variables referenced inside the function. Other forms of capture include making copies of captured variables, and moving values from the environment into the lambda expression's captured environment.

An example of a lambda expression:

fn ten_times(f: fn(int)) {
    let mut i = 0;
    while i < 10 {
        f(i);
        i += 1;
    }
}

ten_times(|j| io::println(fmt!("hello, %d", j)));

While loops

while_expr : "while" expr '{' block '}' ;

A while loop begins by evaluating the boolean loop conditional expression. If the loop conditional expression evaluates to true, the loop body block executes and control returns to the loop conditional expression. If the loop conditional expression evaluates to false, the while expression completes.

An example:

let mut i = 0;

while i < 10 {
    io::println("hello\n");
    i = i + 1;
}

Infinite loops

The keyword loop in Rust appears both in loop expressions and in continue expressions. A loop expression denotes an infinite loop; see Continue expressions for continue expressions.

loop_expr : "loop" [ ident ':' ] '{' block '}';

A loop expression may optionally have a label. If a label is present, then labeled break and loop expressions nested within this loop may exit out of this loop or return control to its head. See Break expressions.

Break expressions

break_expr : "break" [ ident ];

A break expression has an optional label. If the label is absent, then executing a break expression immediately terminates the innermost loop enclosing it. It is only permitted in the body of a loop. If the label is present, then break foo terminates the loop with label foo, which need not be the innermost label enclosing the break expression, but must enclose it.

Continue expressions

continue_expr : "loop" [ ident ];

A continue expression, written loop, also has an optional label. If the label is absent, then executing a loop expression immediately terminates the current iteration of the innermost loop enclosing it, returning control to the loop head. In the case of a while loop, the head is the conditional expression controlling the loop. In the case of a for loop, the head is the call-expression controlling the loop. If the label is present, then loop foo returns control to the head of the loop with label foo, which need not be the innermost label enclosing the break expression, but must enclose it.

A loop expression is only permitted in the body of a loop.

Do expressions

do_expr : "do" expr [ '|' ident_list '|' ] ? '{' block '}' ;

A do expression provides a more-familiar block-syntax for a lambda expression, including a special translation of return expressions inside the supplied block.

The optional ident_list and block provided in a do expression are parsed as though they constitute a lambda expression; if the ident_list is missing, an empty ident_list is implied.

The lambda expression is then provided as a trailing argument to the outermost call or method call expression in the expr following do. If the expr is a path expression, it is parsed as though it is a call expression. If the expr is a field expression, it is parsed as though it is a method call expression.

In this example, both calls to f are equivalent:

# fn f(f: fn(int)) { }
# fn g(i: int) { }

f(|j| g(j));

do f |j| {
    g(j);
}

For expressions

for_expr : "for" expr [ '|' ident_list '|' ] ? '{' block '}' ;

A for expression is similar to a do expression, in that it provides a special block-form of lambda expression, suited to passing the block function to a higher-order function implementing a loop.

Like a do expression, a return expression inside a for expresison is rewritten, to access a local flag that causes an early return in the caller.

Additionally, any occurrence of a return expression inside the block of a for expression is rewritten as a reference to an (anonymous) flag set in the caller's environment, which is checked on return from the expr and, if set, causes a corresponding return from the caller. In this way, the meaning of return statements in language built-in control blocks is preserved, if they are rewritten using lambda functions and do expressions as abstractions.

Like return expressions, any break and loop expressions are rewritten inside for expressions, with a combination of local flag variables, and early boolean-valued returns from the block function, such that the meaning of break and loop is preserved in a primitive loop when rewritten as a for loop controlled by a higher order function.

An example a for loop:

# type foo = int;
# fn bar(f: foo) { }
# let a = 0, b = 0, c = 0;

let v: &[foo] = &[a, b, c];

for v.each |e| {
    bar(*e);
}

If expressions

if_expr : "if" expr '{' block '}'
          else_tail ? ;

else_tail : "else" [ if_expr
                   | '{' block '}' ] ;

An if expression is a conditional branch in program control. The form of an if expression is a condition expression, followed by a consequent block, any number of else if conditions and blocks, and an optional trailing else block. The condition expressions must have type bool. If a condition expression evaluates to true, the consequent block is executed and any subsequent else if or else block is skipped. If a condition expression evaluates to false, the consequent block is skipped and any subsequent else if condition is evaluated. If all if and else if conditions evaluate to false then any else block is executed.

Match expressions

match_expr : "match" expr '{' match_arm [ '|' match_arm ] * '}' ;

match_arm : match_pat '=>' [ expr "," | '{' block '}' ] ;

match_pat : pat [ ".." pat ] ? [ "if" expr ] ;

A match expression branches on a pattern. The exact form of matching that occurs depends on the pattern. Patterns consist of some combination of literals, destructured enum constructors, structures, records and tuples, variable binding specifications, wildcards (*), and placeholders (_). A match expression has a head expression, which is the value to compare to the patterns. The type of the patterns must equal the type of the head expression.

In a pattern whose head expression has an enum type, a placeholder (_) stands for a single data field, whereas a wildcard * stands for all the fields of a particular variant. For example:

enum List<X> { Nil, Cons(X, @List<X>) }

let x: List<int> = Cons(10, @Cons(11, @Nil));

match x {
    Cons(_, @Nil) => die!(~"singleton list"),
    Cons(*)       => return,
    Nil           => die!(~"empty list")
}

The first pattern matches lists constructed by applying Cons to any head value, and a tail value of @Nil. The second pattern matches any list constructed with Cons, ignoring the values of its arguments. The difference between _ and * is that the pattern C(_) is only type-correct if C has exactly one argument, while the pattern C(*) is type-correct for any enum variant C, regardless of how many arguments C has.

To execute an match expression, first the head expression is evaluated, then its value is sequentially compared to the patterns in the arms until a match is found. The first arm with a matching pattern is chosen as the branch target of the match, any variables bound by the pattern are assigned to local variables in the arm's block, and control enters the block.

An example of an match expression:

# fn process_pair(a: int, b: int) { }
# fn process_ten() { }

enum List<X> { Nil, Cons(X, @List<X>) }

let x: List<int> = Cons(10, @Cons(11, @Nil));

match x {
    Cons(a, @Cons(b, _)) => {
        process_pair(a,b);
    }
    Cons(10, _) => {
        process_ten();
    }
    Nil => {
        return;
    }
    _ => {
        die!();
    }
}

Records and structures can also be pattern-matched and their fields bound to variables. When matching fields of a record, the fields being matched are specified first, then a placeholder (_) represents the remaining fields.

# type options = {choose: bool, size: ~str};
# type player = {player: ~str, stats: (), options: options};
# fn load_stats() { }
# fn choose_player(r: &player) { }
# fn next_player() { }

fn main() {
    let r = {
        player: ~"ralph",
        stats: load_stats(),
        options: {
            choose: true,
            size: ~"small"
        }
    };

    match r {
      {options: {choose: true, _}, _} => {
        choose_player(&r)
      }
      {player: ref p, options: {size: ~"small", _}, _} => {
        log(info, (copy *p) + ~" is small");
      }
      _ => {
        next_player();
      }
    }
}

Patterns that bind variables default to binding to a copy of the matched value. This can be made explicit using the copy keyword, changed to bind to a borrowed pointer by using the ref keyword, or to a mutable borrowed pointer using ref mut, or the value can be moved into the new binding using move.

A pattern that's just an identifier, like Nil in the previous answer, could either refer to an enum variant that's in scope, or bind a new variable. The compiler resolves this ambiguity by forbidding variable bindings that occur in match patterns from shadowing names of variants that are in scope. For example, wherever List is in scope, a match pattern would not be able to bind Nil as a new name. The compiler interprets a variable pattern x as a binding only if there is no variant named x in scope. A convention you can use to avoid conflicts is simply to name variants with upper-case letters, and local variables with lower-case letters.

Multiple match patterns may be joined with the | operator. A range of values may be specified with ... For example:

# let x = 2;

let message = match x {
  0 | 1  => "not many",
  2 .. 9 => "a few",
  _      => "lots"
};

Range patterns only work on scalar types (like integers and characters; not like vectors and structs, which have sub-components). A range pattern may not be a sub-range of another range pattern inside the same match.

Finally, match patterns can accept pattern guards to further refine the criteria for matching a case. Pattern guards appear after the pattern and consist of a bool-typed expression following the if keyword. A pattern guard may refer to the variables bound within the pattern they follow.

# let maybe_digit = Some(0);
# fn process_digit(i: int) { }
# fn process_other(i: int) { }

let message = match maybe_digit {
  Some(x) if x < 10 => process_digit(x),
  Some(x) => process_other(x),
  None => die!()
};

Return expressions

return_expr : "return" expr ? ;

Return expressions are denoted with the keyword return. Evaluating a return expression moves its argument into the output slot of the current function, destroys the current function activation frame, and transfers control to the caller frame.

An example of a return expression:

fn max(a: int, b: int) -> int {
   if a > b {
      return a;
   }
   return b;
}

Log expressions

log_expr : "log" '(' level ',' expr ')' ;

Evaluating a log expression may, depending on runtime configuration, cause a value to be appended to an internal diagnostic logging buffer provided by the runtime or emitted to a system console. Log expressions are enabled or disabled dynamically at run-time on a per-task and per-item basis. See logging system.

Each log expression must be provided with a level argument in addition to the value to log. The logging level is a u32 value, where lower levels indicate more-urgent levels of logging. By default, the lowest four logging levels (1_u32 ... 4_u32) are predefined as the constants error, warn, info and debug in the core library.

Additionally, the macros error!, warn!, info! and debug! are defined in the default syntax-extension namespace. These expand into calls to the logging facility composed with calls to the fmt! string formatting syntax-extension.

The following examples all produce the same output, logged at the error logging level:

# let filename = "bulbasaur";

// Full version, logging a value.
log(core::error, ~"file not found: " + filename);

// Log-level abbreviated, since core::* is used by default.
log(error, ~"file not found: " + filename);

// Formatting the message using a format-string and fmt!
log(error, fmt!("file not found: %s", filename));

// Using the error! macro, that expands to the previous call.
error!("file not found: %s", filename);

A log expression is not evaluated when logging at the specified logging-level, module or task is disabled at runtime. This makes inactive log expressions very cheap; they should be used extensively in Rust code, as diagnostic aids, as they add little overhead beyond a single integer-compare and branch at runtime.

Logging is presently implemented as a language built-in feature, as it makes use of compiler-provided, per-module data tables and flags. In the future, logging will move into a library, and will no longer be a core expression type. It is therefore recommended to use the macro forms of logging (error!, debug!, etc.) to minimize disruption in code that uses logging.

Assert expressions

assert_expr : "assert" expr ;

Note: In future versions of Rust, assert will be changed from a full expression to a macro.

An assert expression causes the program to fail if its expr argument evaluates to false. The failure carries string representation of the false expression.

Type system

Types

Every slot, item and value in a Rust program has a type. The type of a value defines the interpretation of the memory holding it.

Built-in types and type-constructors are tightly integrated into the language, in nontrivial ways that are not possible to emulate in user-defined types. User-defined types have limited capabilities.

Primitive types

The primitive types are the following:

  • The "unit" type (), having the single "unit" value () (occasionally called "nil"). ^[The "unit" value () is not a sentinel "null pointer" value for reference slots; the "unit" type is the implicit return type from functions otherwise lacking a return type, and can be used in other contexts (such as message-sending or type-parametric code) as a zero-size type.]
  • The boolean type bool with values true and false.
  • The machine types.
  • The machine-dependent integer and floating-point types.

Machine types

The machine types are the following:

  • The unsigned word types u8, u16, u32 and u64, with values drawn from the integer intervals [0, 2^8 - 1], [0, 2^{16} - 1], [0, 2^{32} - 1] and [0, 2^{64} - 1] respectively.

  • The signed two's complement word types i8, i16, i32 and i64, with values drawn from the integer intervals [-(2^7), 2^7 - 1], [-(2^{15}), 2^{15} - 1], [-(2^{31}), 2^{31} - 1], [-(2^{63}), 2^{63} - 1] respectively.

  • The IEEE 754-2008 binary32 and binary64 floating-point types: f32 and f64, respectively.

Machine-dependent integer types

The Rust type uint^[A Rust uint is analogous to a C99 uintptr_t.] is an unsigned integer type with target-machine-dependent size. Its size, in bits, is equal to the number of bits required to hold any memory address on the target machine.

The Rust type int^[A Rust int is analogous to a C99 intptr_t.] is a two's complement signed integer type with target-machine-dependent size. Its size, in bits, is equal to the size of the rust type uint on the same target machine.

Machine-dependent floating point type

The Rust type float is a machine-specific type equal to one of the supported Rust floating-point machine types (f32 or f64). It is the largest floating-point type that is directly supported by hardware on the target machine, or if the target machine has no floating-point hardware support, the largest floating-point type supported by the software floating-point library used to support the other floating-point machine types.

Note that due to the preference for hardware-supported floating-point, the type float may not be equal to the largest supported floating-point type.

Textual types

The types char and str hold textual data.

A value of type char is a Unicode character, represented as a 32-bit unsigned word holding a UCS-4 codepoint.

A value of type str is a Unicode string, represented as a vector of 8-bit unsigned bytes holding a sequence of UTF-8 codepoints. Since str is of indefinite size, it is not a first class type, but can only be instantiated through a pointer type, such as &str, @str or ~str.

Tuple types

The tuple type-constructor forms a new heterogeneous product of values similar to the record type-constructor. The differences are as follows:

  • tuple elements cannot be mutable, unlike record fields
  • tuple elements are not named and can be accessed only by pattern-matching

Tuple types and values are denoted by listing the types or values of their elements, respectively, in a parenthesized, comma-separated list. Single-element tuples are not legal; all tuples have two or more values.

The members of a tuple are laid out in memory contiguously, like a record, in order specified by the tuple type.

An example of a tuple type and its use:

type Pair = (int,&str);
let p: Pair = (10,"hello");
let (a, b) = p;
assert b != "world";

Vector types

The vector type-constructor represents a homogeneous array of values of a given type. A vector has a fixed size. A vector type can be accompanied by definite size, written with a trailing asterisk and integer literal, such as [int * 10]. Such a definite-sized vector can be treated as a first class type since its size is known statically. A vector without such a size is said to be of indefinite size, and is therefore not a first class type, can only be instantiated through a pointer type, such as &[T], @[T] or ~[T]. The kind of a vector type depends on the kind of its member type, as with other simple structural types.

An example of a vector type and its use:

let v: &[int] = &[7, 5, 3];
let i: int = v[2];
assert (i == 3);

All accessible elements of a vector are always initialized, and access to a vector is always bounds-checked.

Structure types

A struct type is a heterogeneous product of other types, called the fields of the type. ^[struct types are analogous struct types in C, the record types of the ML family, or the structure types of the Lisp family.]

New instances of a struct can be constructed with a struct expression.

The memory order of fields in a struct is given by the item defining it. Fields may be given in any order in a corresponding struct expression; the resulting struct value will always be laid out in memory in the order specified by the corresponding item.

The fields of a struct may be qualified by visibility modifiers, to restrict access to implementation-private data in a structure.

A tuple struct type is just like a structure type, except that the fields are anonymous.

Enumerated types

An enumerated type is a nominal, heterogeneous disjoint union type, denoted by the name of an enum item. ^[The enum type is analogous to a data constructor declaration in ML, or a pick ADT in Limbo.]

An enum item declares both the type and a number of variant constructors, each of which is independently named and takes an optional tuple of arguments.

New instances of an enum can be constructed by calling one of the variant constructors, in a call expression.

Any enum value consumes as much memory as the largest variant constructor for its corresponding enum type.

Enum types cannot be denoted structurally as types, but must be denoted by named reference to an enum item.

Recursive types

Nominal types -- enumerations and structures -- may be recursive. That is, each enum constructor or struct field may refer, directly or indirectly, to the enclosing enum or struct type itself. Such recursion has restrictions:

  • Recursive types must include a nominal type in the recursion (not mere type definitions, or other structural types such as vectors or tuples).
  • A recursive enum item must have at least one non-recursive constructor (in order to give the recursion a basis case).
  • The size of a recursive type must be finite; in other words the recursive fields of the type must be pointer types.
  • Recursive type definitions can cross module boundaries, but not module visibility boundaries, or crate boundaries (in order to simplify the module system and type checker).

An example of a recursive type and its use:

enum List<T> {
  Nil,
  Cons(T, @List<T>)
}

let a: List<int> = Cons(7, @Cons(13, @Nil));

Record types

Note: Records are not nominal types, thus do not directly support recursion, visibility control, out-of-order field initialization, or coherent trait implementation. Records are therefore deprecated and will be removed in future versions of Rust. Structure types should be used instead.

The record type-constructor forms a new heterogeneous product of values. Fields of a record type are accessed by name and are arranged in memory in the order specified by the record type.

An example of a record type and its use:

type Point = {x: int, y: int};
let p: Point = {x: 10, y: 11};
let px: int = p.x;

Pointer types

All pointers in Rust are explicit first-class values. They can be copied, stored into data structures, and returned from functions. There are four varieties of pointer in Rust:

Managed pointers (@) : These point to managed heap allocations (or "boxes") in the task-local, managed heap. Managed pointers are written @content, for example @int means a managed pointer to a managed box containing an integer. Copying a managed pointer is a "shallow" operation: it involves only copying the pointer itself (as well as any reference-count or GC-barriers required by the managed heap). Dropping a managed pointer does not necessarily release the box it points to; the lifecycles of managed boxes are subject to an unspecified garbage collection algorithm.

Owning pointers (~) : These point to owned heap allocations (or "boxes") in the shared, inter-task heap. Each owned box has a single owning pointer; pointer and pointee retain a 1:1 relationship at all times. Owning pointers are written ~content, for example ~int means an owning pointer to an owned box containing an integer. Copying an owned box is a "deep" operation: it involves allocating a new owned box and copying the contents of the old box into the new box. Releasing an owning pointer immediately releases its corresponding owned box.

Borrowed pointers (&) : These point to memory owned by some other value. Borrowed pointers arise by (automatic) conversion from owning pointers, managed pointers, or by applying the borrowing operator & to some other value, including lvalues, rvalues or temporaries. Borrowed pointers are written &content, or in some cases &f/content for some lifetime-variable f, for example &int means a borrowed pointer to an integer. Copying a borrowed pointer is a "shallow" operation: it involves only copying the pointer itself. Releasing a borrowed pointer typically has no effect on the value it points to, with the exception of temporary values, which are released when the last borrowed pointer to them is released.

Raw pointers (*) : Raw pointers are pointers without safety or liveness guarantees. Raw pointers are written *content, for example *int means a raw pointer to an integer. Copying or dropping a raw pointer is has no effect on the lifecycle of any other value. Dereferencing a raw pointer or converting it to any other pointer type is an unsafe operation. Raw pointers are generally discouraged in Rust code; they exist to support interoperability with foreign code, and writing performance-critical or low-level functions.

Function types

The function type-constructor fn forms new function types. A function type consists of a set of function-type modifiers (pure, unsafe, extern, etc.), a sequence of input slots and an output slot.

An example of a fn type:

fn add(x: int, y: int) -> int {
  return x + y;
}

let mut x = add(5,7);

type Binop = fn(int,int) -> int;
let bo: Binop = add;
x = bo(5,7);

Object types

Every trait item (see traits) defines a type with the same name as the trait. This type is called the object type of the trait. Object types permit "late binding" of methods, dispatched using virtual method tables ("vtables"). Whereas most calls to trait methods are "early bound" (statically resolved) to specific implementations at compile time, a call to a method on an object type is only resolved to a vtable entry at compile time. The actual implementation for each vtable entry can vary on an object-by-object basis.

Given a pointer-typed expression E of type &T, ~T or @T, where T implements trait R, casting E to the corresponding pointer type &R, ~R or @R results in a value of the object type R. This result is represented as a pair of pointers: the vtable pointer for the T implementation of R, and the pointer value of E.

An example of an object type:

trait Printable {
  fn to_str() -> ~str;
}

impl int: Printable {
  fn to_str() -> ~str { int::to_str(self) }
}

fn print(a: @Printable) {
   io::println(a.to_str());
}

fn main() {
   print(@10 as @Printable);
}

In this example, the trait Printable occurs as an object type in both the type signature of print, and the cast expression in main.

Type parameters

Within the body of an item that has type parameter declarations, the names of its type parameters are types:

fn map<A: Copy, B: Copy>(f: fn(A) -> B, xs: &[A]) -> ~[B] {
   if xs.len() == 0 { return ~[]; }
   let first: B = f(xs[0]);
   let rest: ~[B] = map(f, xs.slice(1, xs.len()));
   return ~[first] + rest;
}

Here, first has type B, referring to map's B type parameter; and rest has type ~[B], a vector type with element type B.

Self types

The special type self has a meaning within methods inside an impl item. It refers to the type of the implicit self argument. For example, in:

trait Printable {
  fn make_string() -> ~str;
}

impl ~str: Printable {
  fn make_string() -> ~str { copy self }
}

self refers to the value of type ~str that is the receiver for a call to the method make_string.

Type kinds

Types in Rust are categorized into kinds, based on various properties of the components of the type. The kinds are:

Const : Types of this kind are deeply immutable; they contain no mutable memory locations directly or indirectly via pointers. Owned : Types of this kind can be safely sent between tasks. This kind includes scalars, owning pointers, owned closures, and structural types containing only other owned types. All Owned types are Static. Static : Types of this kind do not contain any borrowed pointers; this can be a useful guarantee for code that breaks borrowing assumptions using unsafe operations. Copy : This kind includes all types that can be copied. All types with sendable kind are copyable, as are managed boxes, managed closures, trait types, and structural types built out of these. Types with destructors (types that implement Drop) can not implement Copy. Drop : This is not strictly a kind, but its presence interacts with kinds: the Drop trait provides a single method finalize that takes no parameters, and is run when values of the type are dropped. Such a method is called a "destructor", and are always executed in "top-down" order: a value is completely destroyed before any of the values it owns run their destructors. Only Owned types that do not implement Copy can implement Drop.

Note: The finalize method may be renamed in future versions of Rust.

Default : Types with destructors, closure environments, and various other non-first-class types, are not copyable at all. Such types can usually only be accessed through pointers, or in some cases, moved between mutable locations.

Kinds can be supplied as bounds on type parameters, like traits, in which case the parameter is constrained to types satisfying that kind.

By default, type parameters do not carry any assumed kind-bounds at all.

Any operation that causes a value to be copied requires the type of that value to be of copyable kind, so the Copy bound is frequently required on function type parameters. For example, this is not a valid program:

fn box<T>(x: T) -> @T { @x }

Putting x into a managed box involves copying, and the T parameter has the default (non-copyable) kind. To change that, a bound is declared:

fn box<T: Copy>(x: T) -> @T { @x }

Calling this second version of box on a noncopyable type is not allowed. When instantiating a type parameter, the kind bounds on the parameter are checked to be the same or narrower than the kind of the type that it is instantiated with.

Sending operations are not part of the Rust language, but are implemented in the library. Generic functions that send values bound the kind of these values to sendable.

Memory and concurrency models

Rust has a memory model centered around concurrently-executing tasks. Thus its memory model and its concurrency model are best discussed simultaneously, as parts of each only make sense when considered from the perspective of the other.

When reading about the memory model, keep in mind that it is partitioned in order to support tasks; and when reading about tasks, keep in mind that their isolation and communication mechanisms are only possible due to the ownership and lifetime semantics of the memory model.

Memory model

A Rust program's memory consists of a static set of items, a set of tasks each with its own stack, and a heap. Immutable portions of the heap may be shared between tasks, mutable portions may not.

Allocations in the stack consist of slots, and allocations in the heap consist of boxes.

Memory allocation and lifetime

The items of a program are those functions, modules and types that have their value calculated at compile-time and stored uniquely in the memory image of the rust process. Items are neither dynamically allocated nor freed.

A task's stack consists of activation frames automatically allocated on entry to each function as the task executes. A stack allocation is reclaimed when control leaves the frame containing it.

The heap is a general term that describes two separate sets of boxes: managed boxes -- which may be subject to garbage collection -- and owned boxes. The lifetime of an allocation in the heap depends on the lifetime of the box values pointing to it. Since box values may themselves be passed in and out of frames, or stored in the heap, heap allocations may outlive the frame they are allocated within.

Memory ownership

A task owns all memory it can safely reach through local variables, as well as managed, owning and borrowed pointers.

When a task sends a value that has the Owned trait to another task, it loses ownership of the value sent and can no longer refer to it. This is statically guaranteed by the combined use of "move semantics", and the compiler-checked meaning of the Owned trait: it is only instantiated for (transitively) sendable kinds of data constructor and pointers, never including managed or borrowed pointers.

When a stack frame is exited, its local allocations are all released, and its references to boxes (both managed and owned) are dropped.

A managed box may (in the case of a recursive, mutable managed type) be cyclic; in this case the release of memory inside the managed structure may be deferred until task-local garbage collection can reclaim it. Code can ensure no such delayed deallocation occurs by restricting itself to owned boxes and similar unmanaged kinds of data.

When a task finishes, its stack is necessarily empty and it therefore has no references to any boxes; the remainder of its heap is immediately freed.

Memory slots

A task's stack contains slots.

A slot is a component of a stack frame, either a function parameter, a temporary, or a local variable.

A local variable (or stack-local allocation) holds a value directly, allocated within the stack's memory. The value is a part of the stack frame.

Local variables are immutable unless declared with let mut. The mut keyword applies to all local variables declared within that declaration (so let mut x, y declares two mutable variables, x and y).

Function parameters are immutable unless declared with mut. The mut keyword applies only to the following parameter (so |mut x, y| and fn f(mut x: ~int, y: ~int) declare one mutable variable x and one immutable variable y).

Local variables are not initialized when allocated; the entire frame worth of local variables are allocated at once, on frame-entry, in an uninitialized state. Subsequent statements within a function may or may not initialize the local variables. Local variables can be used only after they have been initialized; this is enforced by the compiler.

Memory boxes

A box is a reference to a heap allocation holding another value. There are two kinds of boxes: managed boxes and owned boxes.

A managed box type or value is constructed by the prefix at sigil @.

An owned box type or value is constructed by the prefix tilde sigil ~.

Multiple managed box values can point to the same heap allocation; copying a managed box value makes a shallow copy of the pointer (optionally incrementing a reference count, if the managed box is implemented through reference-counting).

Owned box values exist in 1:1 correspondence with their heap allocation; copying an owned box value makes a deep copy of the heap allocation and produces a pointer to the new allocation.

An example of constructing one managed box type and value, and one owned box type and value:

let x: @int = @10;
let x: ~int = ~10;

Some operations (such as field selection) implicitly dereference boxes. An example of an implicit dereference operation performed on box values:

let x = @{y: 10};
assert x.y == 10;

Other operations act on box values as single-word-sized address values. For these operations, to access the value held in the box requires an explicit dereference of the box value. Explicitly dereferencing a box is indicated with the unary star operator *. Examples of such explicit dereference operations are:

  • copying box values (x = y)
  • passing box values to functions (f(x,y))

An example of an explicit-dereference operation performed on box values:

fn takes_boxed(b: @int) {
}

fn takes_unboxed(b: int) {
}

fn main() {
    let x: @int = @10;
    takes_boxed(x);
    takes_unboxed(*x);
}

Tasks

An executing Rust program consists of a tree of tasks. A Rust task consists of an entry function, a stack, a set of outgoing communication channels and incoming communication ports, and ownership of some portion of the heap of a single operating-system process.

Multiple Rust tasks may coexist in a single operating-system process. The runtime scheduler maps tasks to a certain number of operating-system threads; by default a number of threads is used based on the number of concurrent physical CPUs detected at startup, but this can be changed dynamically at runtime. When the number of tasks exceeds the number of threads -- which is quite possible -- the tasks are multiplexed onto the threads ^[This is an M:N scheduler, which is known to give suboptimal results for CPU-bound concurrency problems. In such cases, running with the same number of threads as tasks can give better results. The M:N scheduling in Rust exists to support very large numbers of tasks in contexts where threads are too resource-intensive to use in a similar volume. The cost of threads varies substantially per operating system, and is sometimes quite low, so this flexibility is not always worth exploiting.]

Communication between tasks

Rust tasks are isolated and generally unable to interfere with one another's memory directly, except through unsafe code. All contact between tasks is mediated by safe forms of ownership transfer, and data races on memory are prohibited by the type system.

Inter-task communication and co-ordination facilities are provided in the standard library. These include:

  • synchronous and asynchronous communication channels with various communication topologies
  • read-only and read-write shared variables with various safe mutual exclusion patterns
  • simple locks and semaphores

When such facilities carry values, the values are restricted to the Owned type-kind. Restricting communication interfaces to this kind ensures that no borrowed or managed pointers move between tasks. Thus access to an entire data structure can be mediated through its owning "root" value; no further locking or copying is required to avoid data races within the substructure of such a value.

Task lifecycle

The lifecycle of a task consists of a finite set of states and events that cause transitions between the states. The lifecycle states of a task are:

  • running
  • blocked
  • failing
  • dead

A task begins its lifecycle -- once it has been spawned -- in the running state. In this state it executes the statements of its entry function, and any functions called by the entry function.

A task may transition from the running state to the blocked state any time it makes a blocking communication call. When the call can be completed -- when a message arrives at a sender, or a buffer opens to receive a message -- then the blocked task will unblock and transition back to running.

A task may transition to the failing state at any time, due being killed by some external event or internally, from the evaluation of a fail!() macro. Once failing, a task unwinds its stack and transitions to the dead state. Unwinding the stack of a task is done by the task itself, on its own control stack. If a value with a destructor is freed during unwinding, the code for the destructor is run, also on the task's control stack. Running the destructor code causes a temporary transition to a running state, and allows the destructor code to cause any subsequent state transitions. The original task of unwinding and failing thereby may suspend temporarily, and may involve (recursive) unwinding of the stack of a failed destructor. Nonetheless, the outermost unwinding activity will continue until the stack is unwound and the task transitions to the dead state. There is no way to "recover" from task failure. Once a task has temporarily suspended its unwinding in the failing state, failure occurring from within this destructor results in hard failure. The unwinding procedure of hard failure frees resources but does not execute destructors. The original (soft) failure is still resumed at the point where it was temporarily suspended.

A task in the dead state cannot transition to other states; it exists only to have its termination status inspected by other tasks, and/or to await reclamation when the last reference to it drops.

Task scheduling

The currently scheduled task is given a finite time slice in which to execute, after which it is descheduled at a loop-edge or similar preemption point, and another task within is scheduled, pseudo-randomly.

An executing task can yield control at any time, by making a library call to core::task::yield, which deschedules it immediately. Entering any other non-executing state (blocked, dead) similarly deschedules the task.

Runtime services, linkage and debugging

The Rust runtime is a relatively compact collection of C++ and Rust code that provides fundamental services and datatypes to all Rust tasks at run-time. It is smaller and simpler than many modern language runtimes. It is tightly integrated into the language's execution model of memory, tasks, communication and logging.

Note: The runtime library will merge with the core library in future versions of Rust.

Memory allocation

The runtime memory-management system is based on a service-provider interface, through which the runtime requests blocks of memory from its environment and releases them back to its environment when they are no longer in use. The default implementation of the service-provider interface consists of the C runtime functions malloc and free.

The runtime memory-management system in turn supplies Rust tasks with facilities for allocating, extending and releasing stacks, as well as allocating and freeing boxed values.

Built in types

The runtime provides C and Rust code to assist with various built-in types, such as vectors, strings, and the low level communication system (ports, channels, tasks).

Support for other built-in types such as simple types, tuples, records, and enums is open-coded by the Rust compiler.

Task scheduling and communication

The runtime provides code to manage inter-task communication. This includes the system of task-lifecycle state transitions depending on the contents of queues, as well as code to copy values between queues and their recipients and to serialize values for transmission over operating-system inter-process communication facilities.

Logging system

The runtime contains a system for directing logging expressions to a logging console and/or internal logging buffers. Logging expressions can be enabled per module.

Logging output is enabled by setting the RUST_LOG environment variable. RUST_LOG accepts a logging specification made up of a comma-separated list of paths, with optional log levels. For each module containing log expressions, if RUST_LOG contains the path to that module or a parent of that module, then logs of the appropriate level will be output to the console.

The path to a module consists of the crate name, any parent modules, then the module itself, all separated by double colons (::). The optional log level can be appended to the module path with an equals sign (=) followed by the log level, from 1 to 4, inclusive. Level 1 is the error level, 2 is warning, 3 info, and 4 debug. Any logs less than or equal to the specified level will be output. If not specified then log level 4 is assumed.

As an example, to see all the logs generated by the compiler, you would set RUST_LOG to rustc, which is the crate name (as specified in its link attribute). To narrow down the logs to just crate resolution, you would set it to rustc::metadata::creader. To see just error logging use rustc=0.

Note that when compiling either .rs or .rc files that don't specify a crate name the crate is given a default name that matches the source file, with the extension removed. In that case, to turn on logging for a program compiled from, e.g. helloworld.rs, RUST_LOG should be set to helloworld.

As a convenience, the logging spec can also be set to a special pseudo-crate, ::help. In this case, when the application starts, the runtime will simply output a list of loaded modules containing log expressions, then exit.

The Rust runtime itself generates logging information. The runtime's logs are generated for a number of artificial modules in the ::rt pseudo-crate, and can be enabled just like the logs for any standard module. The full list of runtime logging modules follows.

  • ::rt::mem Memory management
  • ::rt::comm Messaging and task communication
  • ::rt::task Task management
  • ::rt::dom Task scheduling
  • ::rt::trace Unused
  • ::rt::cache Type descriptor cache
  • ::rt::upcall Compiler-generated runtime calls
  • ::rt::timer The scheduler timer
  • ::rt::gc Garbage collection
  • ::rt::stdlib Functions used directly by the standard library
  • ::rt::kern The runtime kernel
  • ::rt::backtrace Log a backtrace on task failure
  • ::rt::callback Unused

Appendix: Rationales and design tradeoffs

TODO.

Appendix: Influences and further references

Influences

The essential problem that must be solved in making a fault-tolerant software system is therefore that of fault-isolation. Different programmers will write different modules, some modules will be correct, others will have errors. We do not want the errors in one module to adversely affect the behaviour of a module which does not have any errors.

— Joe Armstrong

In our approach, all data is private to some process, and processes can only communicate through communications channels. Security, as used in this paper, is the property which guarantees that processes in a system cannot affect each other except by explicit communication.

When security is absent, nothing which can be proven about a single module in isolation can be guaranteed to hold when that module is embedded in a system [...]

— Robert Strom and Shaula Yemini

Concurrent and applicative programming complement each other. The ability to send messages on channels provides I/O without side effects, while the avoidance of shared data helps keep concurrent processes from colliding.

— Rob Pike

Rust is not a particularly original language. It may however appear unusual by contemporary standards, as its design elements are drawn from a number of "historical" languages that have, with a few exceptions, fallen out of favour. Five prominent lineages contribute the most, though their influences have come and gone during the course of Rust's development:

  • The NIL (1981) and Hermes (1990) family. These languages were developed by Robert Strom, Shaula Yemini, David Bacon and others in their group at IBM Watson Research Center (Yorktown Heights, NY, USA).

  • The Erlang (1987) language, developed by Joe Armstrong, Robert Virding, Claes Wikström, Mike Williams and others in their group at the Ericsson Computer Science Laboratory (Älvsjö, Stockholm, Sweden) .

  • The Sather (1990) language, developed by Stephen Omohundro, Chu-Cheow Lim, Heinz Schmidt and others in their group at The International Computer Science Institute of the University of California, Berkeley (Berkeley, CA, USA).

  • The Newsqueak (1988), Alef (1995), and Limbo (1996) family. These languages were developed by Rob Pike, Phil Winterbottom, Sean Dorward and others in their group at Bell Labs Computing Sciences Research Center (Murray Hill, NJ, USA).

  • The Napier (1985) and Napier88 (1988) family. These languages were developed by Malcolm Atkinson, Ron Morrison and others in their group at the University of St. Andrews (St. Andrews, Fife, UK).

Additional specific influences can be seen from the following languages:

  • The stack-growth implementation of Go.
  • The structural algebraic types and compilation manager of SML.
  • The attribute and assembly systems of C#.
  • The references and deterministic destructor system of C++.
  • The memory region systems of the ML Kit and Cyclone.
  • The typeclass system of Haskell.
  • The lexical identifier rule of Python.
  • The block syntax of Ruby.