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//! Thread-local destructor
//!
//! Besides thread-local "keys" (pointer-sized non-addressable thread-local store
//! with an associated destructor), many platforms also provide thread-local
//! destructors that are not associated with any particular data. These are
//! often more efficient.
//!
//! This module provides a fallback implementation for that interface, based
//! on the less efficient thread-local "keys". Each platform provides
//! a `thread_local_dtor` module which will either re-export the fallback,
//! or implement something more efficient.
#![unstable(feature = "thread_local_internals", issue = "none")]
#![allow(dead_code)]
use crate::ptr;
use crate::sys_common::thread_local_key::StaticKey;
pub unsafe fn register_dtor_fallback(t: *mut u8, dtor: unsafe extern "C" fn(*mut u8)) {
// The fallback implementation uses a vanilla OS-based TLS key to track
// the list of destructors that need to be run for this thread. The key
// then has its own destructor which runs all the other destructors.
//
// The destructor for DTORS is a little special in that it has a `while`
// loop to continuously drain the list of registered destructors. It
// *should* be the case that this loop always terminates because we
// provide the guarantee that a TLS key cannot be set after it is
// flagged for destruction.
static DTORS: StaticKey = StaticKey::new(Some(run_dtors));
type List = Vec<(*mut u8, unsafe extern "C" fn(*mut u8))>;
if DTORS.get().is_null() {
let v: Box<List> = box Vec::new();
DTORS.set(Box::into_raw(v) as *mut u8);
}
let list: &mut List = &mut *(DTORS.get() as *mut List);
list.push((t, dtor));
unsafe extern "C" fn run_dtors(mut ptr: *mut u8) {
while !ptr.is_null() {
let list: Box<List> = Box::from_raw(ptr as *mut List);
for (ptr, dtor) in list.into_iter() {
dtor(ptr);
}
ptr = DTORS.get();
DTORS.set(ptr::null_mut());
}
}
}