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core: Remove panics from some Layout methods
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`Layout` is often used at the core of allocation APIs and is as a result pretty
sensitive to codegen in various circumstances. I was profiling `-C opt-level=z`
with a wasm project recently and noticed that the `unwrap()` wasn't removed
inside of `Layout`, causing the program to be much larger than it otherwise
would be. If inlining were more aggressive LLVM would have figured out that the
panic could be eliminated, but in general the methods here can't panic in the
first place!

As a result this commit makes the following tweaks:

* Removes `unwrap()` and replaces it with `unsafe` in `Layout::new` and
  `Layout::for_value`. For posterity though a debug assertion was left behind.
* Removes an `unwrap()` in favor of `?` in the `repeat` method. The comment
  indicating that the function call couldn't panic wasn't quite right in that if
  `alloc_size` becomes too large and if `align` is high enough it could indeed
  cause a panic.

This'll hopefully mean that panics never get introduced into code in the first
place, ensuring that `opt-level=z` is closer to `opt-level=s` in this regard.
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alexcrichton committed Apr 13, 2018
1 parent 99d4886 commit 68e555b
Showing 1 changed file with 14 additions and 8 deletions.
22 changes: 14 additions & 8 deletions src/libcore/alloc.rs
Expand Up @@ -145,15 +145,26 @@ impl Layout {
/// Constructs a `Layout` suitable for holding a value of type `T`.
pub fn new<T>() -> Self {
let (size, align) = size_align::<T>();
Layout::from_size_align(size, align).unwrap()
// Note that the align is guaranteed by rustc to be a power of two and
// the size+align combo is guaranteed to fit in our address space. As a
// result use the unchecked constructor here to avoid inserting code
// that panics if it isn't optimized well enough.
debug_assert!(Layout::from_size_align(size, align).is_ok());
unsafe {
Layout::from_size_align_unchecked(size, align)
}
}

/// Produces layout describing a record that could be used to
/// allocate backing structure for `T` (which could be a trait
/// or other unsized type like a slice).
pub fn for_value<T: ?Sized>(t: &T) -> Self {
let (size, align) = (mem::size_of_val(t), mem::align_of_val(t));
Layout::from_size_align(size, align).unwrap()
// See rationale in `new` for why this us using an unsafe variant below
debug_assert!(Layout::from_size_align(size, align).is_ok());
unsafe {
Layout::from_size_align_unchecked(size, align)
}
}

/// Creates a layout describing the record that can hold a value
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -234,12 +245,7 @@ impl Layout {
.ok_or(LayoutErr { private: () })?;
let alloc_size = padded_size.checked_mul(n)
.ok_or(LayoutErr { private: () })?;

// We can assume that `self.align` is a power-of-two.
// Furthermore, `alloc_size` has already been rounded up
// to a multiple of `self.align`; therefore, the call to
// `Layout::from_size_align` below should never panic.
Ok((Layout::from_size_align(alloc_size, self.align).unwrap(), padded_size))
Ok((Layout::from_size_align(alloc_size, self.align)?, padded_size))
}

/// Creates a layout describing the record for `self` followed by
Expand Down

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