dtor 0.13.0

__attribute__((destructor)) for Rust
Documentation

Build Status

The crate is part of the linktime project.

crate docs version
linktime docs.rs crates.io
ctor docs.rs crates.io
dtor docs.rs crates.io
link-section docs.rs crates.io

dtor

Shutdown functions for Rust (like __attribute__((destructor)) in C/C++) for Linux, OSX, Windows, mobile (iOS/Android), WASM, BSD/BSD-likes and many other platforms.

use dtor::dtor;
use libc_print::*;

#[dtor(unsafe)]
fn foo() {
    libc_println!("Life after main!");
}

Examples

Print a message at shutdown time.

#[dtor(unsafe)]
fn shutdown() {
    // Using println! or eprintln! here may panic as Rust may have
    // shut down some stdlib services at this time.
    libc_println!("Shutting down!");
}

Platform Support

Platform Link Section at_binary_exit at_module_exit
Linux .fini_array Yes (atexit) Yes (__cxa_atexit)
MacOS .mod_term_func 🍎 Yes (atexit) Yes (__cxa_atexit)
Windows .CRT$XPU 🪟 No Yes (atexit)
AIX No 🔵 Yes Yes
Other POSIX-like platforms .fini_array/.dtors Yes (atexit) Yes (__cxa_atexit)

Notes:

  • 🍎 Not recommended. Apple platforms no longer call mod_term_func functions.
  • 🪟 Not recommended. Windows platforms may not reliably call functions in link sections, unless a binary is built with a static CRT.
  • 🔵 Link sections are not supported on AIX, but the platform calls functions with the prefix __sinit and __sterm at startup and shutdown respectively.

Shutdown Method (#[dtor(method = ...)])

The #[dtor] macro supports multiple registration strategies via #[dtor(method = ...)]. The best choice is platform-dependent:

  • #[dtor] (no method specified): Use the platform's most reliable method: at_module_exit on Windows and Apple platforms, and linker on others.
  • unload: Run on module unload (library unload or process exit) using the platform's default unload method.
  • term: Run on process termination only using the platform's default termination method. Not recommended: code may be unloaded before the dtor runs.
  • at_module_exit: Register using __cxa_atexit (non-Windows) or atexit (Windows) so the dtor runs when the module unloads.
  • at_binary_exit: Register to run at process exit (unsupported on Windows).
  • linker: Register using the platform's linker mechanism (link_section on all platforms with the exception of export_name_prefix on AIX). Unsupported on Apple platforms.

Default:

  • Apple and Windows default to at_module_exit
  • Most other platforms default to linker

Examples:

use dtor::dtor;
/// Use `at_module_exit` on all platforms
#[dtor(unsafe, method = at_module_exit)]
fn shutdown() {}
use dtor::dtor;

/// Use `link_section` with a section name of `.dtors` on most platforms,
/// and `export_name_prefix` on AIX.
/// 
/// Platform note: this will fail to compile on Apple platforms.
#[dtor(unsafe, method = linker, link_section = ".dtors")]
fn shutdown() {}

Warnings

Rust's philosophy is that nothing happens before or after main and this library explicitly subverts that. The code that runs in the ctor and dtor functions should be careful to limit itself to libc functions and code that does not rely on Rust's stdlib services.

See ::life_before_main for more information.

Under the Hood

The #[dtor] macro effectively creates a constructor that calls libc::atexit with the provided function, i.e. roughly equivalent to:

#[ctor]
fn dtor_atexit() {
    libc::atexit(dtor);
}

Crate Features

Cargo feature Description
proc_macro Enable support for the proc-macro #[dtor] attribute. The declarative form (dtor!(...)) is always available. It is recommended that crates re-exporting the dtor macro disable this feature and only use the declarative form.
std Enable support for the standard library.

Macro Attributes

Make the ctor function anonymous.

Specify a custom crate path for the dtor crate. Used when re-exporting the dtor macro.

Specify a custom export name prefix for the constructor function.

If specified, an export with the given prefix will be generated in the form:

<prefix>_<unique_id>

Place the initialization function pointer in a custom link section.

Specify a custom export name prefix for the destructor function.

If specified, an export with the given prefix will be generated in the form:

<prefix>_<unique_id>

Place the destructor function pointer in a custom link section.

Specify the dtor method.

  • term: Run the dtor on binary termination using the platform's default_term_method. Not recommended as code may be unloaded before the dtor is called.
  • unload: Run the dtor on module unload (library or binary) using the platform's default_unload_method.
  • at_module_exit: Run the dtor using the platform's at_module_exit (__cxa_atexit on all platforms other than Windows, atexit on Windows).
  • at_binary_exit: Run the dtor using the platform's at_binary_exit (unsupported on Windows platforms).
  • linker: Register the dtor using the platform's link_section or export_name_prefix (unsupported on Apple platforms).

Marks a dtor as unsafe. Required.

The ctor crate will warn if there is no unsafe flag in the ctor annotation. This warning for a missing unsafe keyword can be hidden by passing RUSTFLAGS="--cfg linktime_no_fail_on_missing_unsafe" to Cargo.

Mark generated functions pointers used(linker). Requires nightly for the nightly-only feature feature(used_with_arg) (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93798).

The can be made the default by using the cfg flag linktime_used_linker (RUSTFLAGS="--cfg linktime_used_linker").

For a crate using this macro to function correctly with and without this flag, it is recommended to add the following line to the top of lib.rs in the crate root:

#![cfg_attr(linktime_used_linker, feature(used_with_arg))]

Defaults

ctor_export_name_prefix

#[cfg(target_os = "aix")]
ctor_export_name_prefix = "__sinit80000000"

// default
ctor_export_name_prefix = ()

ctor_link_section

#[cfg(target_vendor = "apple")]
ctor_link_section = "__DATA,__mod_init_func,mod_init_funcs"

#[cfg(any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android", target_os = "freebsd",
target_os = "netbsd", target_os = "openbsd", target_os = "dragonfly",
target_os = "illumos", target_os = "haiku", target_os = "vxworks", target_os =
"nto", target_family = "wasm"))]
ctor_link_section = ".init_array"

#[cfg(target_os = "none")]
ctor_link_section = ".init_array"

#[cfg(target_arch = "xtensa")]
ctor_link_section = ".ctors"

#[cfg(all(target_vendor = "pc", any(target_env = "gnu", target_env = "msvc")))]
ctor_link_section = ".CRT$XCU"

#[cfg(all(target_vendor = "pc", not(any(target_env = "gnu", target_env = "msvc"))))]
ctor_link_section = ".ctors"

#[cfg(all(target_os = "aix"))]
ctor_link_section = ()

// default
ctor_link_section = (compile_error! ("Unsupported target for #[ctor]"))

default_term_method

#[cfg(target_vendor = "pc")]
default_term_method = at_module_exit

// default
default_term_method = at_binary_exit

default_unload_method

// default
default_unload_method = at_module_exit

export_name_prefix

#[cfg(target_os = "aix")]
export_name_prefix = "__sterm80000000"

// default
export_name_prefix = ()

link_section

#[cfg(target_vendor = "apple")]
link_section = "__DATA,__mod_term_func,mod_term_funcs"

#[cfg(any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android", target_os = "freebsd",
target_os = "netbsd", target_os = "openbsd", target_os = "dragonfly",
target_os = "illumos", target_os = "haiku", target_os = "vxworks", target_os =
"nto", target_family = "wasm"))]
link_section = ".fini_array"

#[cfg(target_os = "none")]
link_section = ".fini_array"

#[cfg(target_arch = "xtensa")]
link_section = ".dtors"

#[cfg(all(target_vendor = "pc", any(target_env = "gnu", target_env = "msvc")))]
link_section = ".CRT$XPU"

#[cfg(all(target_vendor = "pc", not(any(target_env = "gnu", target_env = "msvc"))))]
link_section = ".dtors"

#[cfg(all(target_os = "aix"))]
link_section = ()

// default
link_section = (compile_error! ("Unsupported target for #[dtor]"))

method

#[cfg(target_vendor = "apple")]
method = at_module_exit

#[cfg(target_vendor = "pc")]
method = at_module_exit

// default
method = linker

r#unsafe

#[cfg(linktime_no_fail_on_missing_unsafe)]
r#unsafe = (no_fail_on_missing_unsafe)

// default
r#unsafe = ()

used_linker

#[cfg(linktime_used_linker)]
used_linker = used_linker

// default
used_linker = ()