safe 0.1.0

A `#[safe]` attribute for explaining why `unsafe { ... }` is OK.
Documentation

rust-safe

Build Status Crates.io Docs.rs

A #[safe] attribute for explaining why unsafe { ... } is OK.

Getting Started

This crate is mainly meant as a way to document your unsafe code. The simplest usage is to use a #[safe(reason = "...")] attribute:

#[safe(reason = "All zeroes is a valid bit pattern for a `u8` array")]
unsafe {
  let buffer: [u8; 32] = std::mem::zeroed();
}

You can also provide pre- and post-conditions with the requires and ensures arguments.

const HELLO_WORLD: &[u8] = b"Hello, World!\0";

let mut buffer: *mut c_char = std::ptr::null_mut();

#[safe(reason = "This is a valid way to initialize a C-style string",
        requires = "buffer.is_null()",
        ensures = "libc::strlen(buffer) == HELLO_WORLD.len()-1")]
unsafe {
  buffer = libc::malloc(42) as *mut c_char;

  libc::strcpy(buffer, HELLO_WORLD.as_ptr() as *const c_char);
}

Nightly Rust

Unfortunately, you'll need to be using nightly when this custom attribute is applied to an expression. These feature flags are:

  • stmt_expr_attributes
  • proc_macro_hygiene

For more discussion, see #3.

License

This project is licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.