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One Of The Rust Linux Kernel Maintainers Steps Down - Cites "Nontechnical Nonsense"
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I agree and think that should be helpful, but I hesitate to say how much easier that actually makes writing sound unsafe code. I'd think most experienced C developers also implicitly know when they're doing unsafe things, with or without an
unsafeblock in the language -- although I think the explicitunsafeshould likely help code reviewers and tired developers.It is possible to write highly unsafe code in Rust while each individual
unsafeblock appears sound. As a simple example: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=6a1428d9cae5b9343b464709573648b4 [1] Run that onDebugandReleasebuilds. Notice the output is different? Don't take that example as some sort of difficult case, you wouldn't write this code, but the concepts in it are a bit worrisome. That code is a silly example, but each individualunsafeblock appears sound when trying to reason only within the block. There is unsafe behavior happening outside of theunsafeblocks (thedo_some_thingsfunction should raise eyebrows), and the function we ultimately end up in has no idea something unsafe has happened.Unsafe code in Rust is not easy, and to some extent it breaks abstractions (maybe pointers in general break abstractions to some extent?).
noaliasesin that playground code rightly assumes you can't have a&refand&mut refto the same thing, that's undefined behavior in Rust. Yet to understand the cause of that bug you have to look at all function calls on the way, just as you would have to in C, and one of the biggest issues in the code exists outside of anunsafeblock.[1]: If you don't want to click that link or it breaks, here is the code: