rust/tests/ui/array-slice-vec/nested-vec-3.rs

61 lines
2.0 KiB
Rust

//@ run-pass
//@ needs-unwind
#![allow(overflowing_literals)]
//@ ignore-emscripten no threads support
// Test that using the `vec!` macro nested within itself works when
// the contents implement Drop and we hit a panic in the middle of
// construction.
use std::thread;
use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering};
static LOG: AtomicUsize = AtomicUsize::new(0);
struct D(u8);
impl Drop for D {
fn drop(&mut self) {
println!("Dropping {}", self.0);
let old = LOG.load(Ordering::SeqCst);
let _ = LOG.compare_exchange(
old,
old << 4 | self.0 as usize,
Ordering::SeqCst,
Ordering::SeqCst,
);
}
}
fn main() {
fn die() -> D { panic!("Oh no"); }
let g = thread::spawn(|| {
let _nested = vec![vec![D( 1), D( 2), D( 3), D( 4)],
vec![D( 5), D( 6), D( 7), D( 8)],
vec![D( 9), D(10), die(), D(12)],
vec![D(13), D(14), D(15), D(16)]];
});
assert!(g.join().is_err());
// When the panic occurs, we will be in the midst of constructing the
// second inner vector. Therefore, we drop the elements of the
// partially filled vector first, before we get around to dropping
// the elements of the filled vector.
// Issue 23222: The order in which the elements actually get
// dropped is a little funky: as noted above, we'll drop the 9+10
// first, but due to #23222, they get dropped in reverse
// order. Likewise, again due to #23222, we will drop the second
// filled vec before the first filled vec.
//
// If Issue 23222 is "fixed", then presumably the corrected
// expected order of events will be 0x__9_A__1_2_3_4__5_6_7_8;
// that is, we would still drop 9+10 first, since they belong to
// the more deeply nested expression when the panic occurs.
let expect = 0x__A_9__5_6_7_8__1_2_3_4;
let actual = LOG.load(Ordering::SeqCst);
assert!(actual == expect, "expect: 0x{:x} actual: 0x{:x}", expect, actual);
}