@@ -946,8 +946,13 @@ use crate::{
946946///
947947/// In order to pin a value, we wrap a *pointer to that value* (of some type `Ptr`) in a
948948/// [`Pin<Ptr>`]. [`Pin<Ptr>`] can wrap any pointer type, forming a promise that the **pointee**
949- /// will not be *moved* or [otherwise invalidated][subtle-details]. Note that it is impossible
950- /// to create or misuse a [`Pin<Ptr>`] which can violate this promise without using [`unsafe`].
949+ /// will not be *moved* or [otherwise invalidated][subtle-details]. Note that it is
950+ /// impossible to create or misuse a [`Pin<Ptr>`] to violate this promise without using [`unsafe`].
951+ /// If the pointee value's type implements [`Unpin`], we are free to disregard these requirements
952+ /// entirely and can wrap any pointer to that value in [`Pin`] directly via [`Pin::new`].
953+ /// If the pointee value's type does not implement [`Unpin`], then Rust will not let us use the
954+ /// [`Pin::new`] function directly and we'll need to construct a [`Pin`]-wrapped pointer in one of
955+ /// the more specialized manners discussed below.
951956///
952957/// We call such a [`Pin`]-wrapped pointer a **pinning pointer,** (or pinning ref, or pinning
953958/// [`Box`], etc.) because its existince is the thing that is pinning the underlying pointee in
@@ -957,25 +962,57 @@ use crate::{
957962/// itself, but rather a pointer to that value! A [`Pin<Ptr>`] does not pin the `Ptr` but rather
958963/// the pointer's ***pointee** value*.
959964///
960- /// For the vast majoriy of Rust types, pinning a value of that type will actually have no effect.
961- /// This is because the vast majority of types implement the [`Unpin`] trait, which entirely opts
962- /// all values of that type out of pinning-related guarantees. The most common exception
963- /// to this is the compiler-generated types that implement [`Future`] for the return value
964- /// of `async fn`s. These compiler-generated [`Future`]s do not implement [`Unpin`] for reasons
965- /// explained more in the [`pin` module] docs, but suffice it to say they require the guarantees
966- /// provided by pinning to be implemented soundly.
965+ /// The most common set of types which require pinning related guarantees for soundness are the
966+ /// state machines that implement [`Future`] for the return value of `async fn`s under the
967+ /// hood. These compiler-generated [`Future`]s may contain self-referrential pointers, one of the
968+ /// most common use cases for [`Pin`]. More details on this point are provided in the
969+ /// [`pin` module] docs, but suffice it to say they require the guarantees provided by pinning to
970+ /// be implemented soundly.
967971///
968- /// This requirement in the implementation of `async fn`s means that the [`Future`] trait requires
969- /// any [`Future`] to be pinned in order to call [`poll`] on it. Therefore, when manually polling
970- /// a future, you will need to pin it first.
972+ /// This requirement from the implementation of `async fn`s means that the [`Future`] trait
973+ /// requires all calls to [`poll`] to use a <code>self: [Pin]\<&mut Self></code> parameter instead
974+ /// of the usual `&mut self`. Therefore, when manually polling a future, you will need to pin it
975+ /// first.
976+ ///
977+ /// You may notice that `async fn`-generated [`Future`]s are only a small percentage of all
978+ /// [`Future`]s that exist, yet we had to modify the signature of [`poll`] for all [`Future`]s
979+ /// to accommodate them. This is unfortunate, but there is a way that the language attempts to
980+ /// alleviate the extra friction that this API choice incurs: the [`Unpin`] trait.
981+ ///
982+ /// The vast majority of Rust types have no reason to ever care about being pinned. These
983+ /// types implement the [`Unpin`] trait, which entirely opts all values of that type out of
984+ /// pinning-related guarantees. For values of these types, pinning a value by pointing to it with a
985+ /// [`Pin<Ptr>`] will have no actual effect.
986+ ///
987+ /// The reason this distinction exists is exactly to allow APIs like [`Future::poll`] to take a
988+ /// [`Pin<Ptr>`] as an argument for all types while only forcing [`Future`] types that actually
989+ /// care about pinning guarantees pay the ergonomics cost. For the majority of [`Future`] types
990+ /// that don't have a reason to care about being pinned and therefore implement [`Unpin`], the
991+ /// <code>[Pin]\<&mut Self></code> will act exactly like a regular `&mut Self`, allowing direct
992+ /// access to the underlying value. Only types that *don't* implement [`Unpin`] will be restricted.
993+ ///
994+ /// ### Pinning a value of a type that implements [`Unpin`]
995+ ///
996+ /// If the type of the value you need to "pin" implements [`Unpin`], you can trivially wrap any
997+ /// pointer to that value in a [`Pin`] by calling [`Pin::new`].
998+ ///
999+ /// ```
1000+ /// use std::pin::Pin;
1001+ ///
1002+ /// // Create a value of a type that implements `Unpin`
1003+ /// let mut unpin_future = std::future::ready(5);
1004+ ///
1005+ /// // Pin it by creating a pinning mutable reference to it (ready to be `poll`ed!)
1006+ /// let my_pinned_unpin_future: Pin<&mut _> = Pin::new(&mut unpin_future);
1007+ /// ```
9711008///
9721009/// ### Pinning a value inside a [`Box`]
9731010///
974- /// The simplest and most flexible way to pin a value is to put that value inside a [`Box `] and
975- /// then turn that [`Box`] into a "pinning [`Box`]" by wrapping it in a [`Pin`].
976- /// You can do both of these in a single step using [`Box::pin`]. Let's see an example of using
977- /// this flow to pin a [`Future`] returned from calling an `async fn`, a common use case
978- /// as described above.
1011+ /// The simplest and most flexible way to pin a value that does not implement [`Unpin `] is to put
1012+ /// that value inside a [`Box`] and then turn that [`Box`] into a "pinning [`Box`]" by wrapping it
1013+ /// in a [`Pin`]. You can do both of these in a single step using [`Box::pin`]. Let's see an
1014+ /// example of using this flow to pin a [`Future`] returned from calling an `async fn`, a common
1015+ /// use case as described above.
9791016///
9801017/// ```
9811018/// use std::pin::Pin;
@@ -1019,8 +1056,8 @@ use crate::{
10191056///
10201057/// There are some situations where it is desirable or even required (for example, in a `#[no_std]`
10211058/// context where you don't have access to the standard library or allocation in general) to
1022- /// pin a value to its location on the stack. Doing so is possible using the [`pin!`] macro. See
1023- /// its documentation for more.
1059+ /// pin a value which does not implement [`Unpin`] to its location on the stack. Doing so is
1060+ /// possible using the [`pin!`] macro. See its documentation for more.
10241061///
10251062/// ## Layout and ABI
10261063///
@@ -1033,6 +1070,7 @@ use crate::{
10331070/// [`pin!`]: crate::pin::pin "pin!"
10341071/// [`Future`]: crate::future::Future "Future"
10351072/// [`poll`]: crate::future::Future::poll "Future::poll"
1073+ /// [`Future::poll`]: crate::future::Future::poll "Future::poll"
10361074/// [`pin` module]: self "pin module"
10371075/// [`Rc`]: ../../std/rc/struct.Rc.html "Rc"
10381076/// [`Arc`]: ../../std/sync/struct.Arc.html "Arc"
@@ -1138,7 +1176,10 @@ impl<Ptr: Deref<Target: Unpin>> Pin<Ptr> {
11381176 /// use std::pin::Pin;
11391177 ///
11401178 /// let mut val: u8 = 5;
1141- /// // We can pin the value, since it doesn't care about being moved
1179+ ///
1180+ /// // Since `val` doesn't care about being moved, we can safely create a "facade" `Pin`
1181+ /// // which will allow `val` to participate in `Pin`-bound apis without checking that
1182+ /// // pinning guarantees are actually upheld.
11421183 /// let mut pinned: Pin<&mut u8> = Pin::new(&mut val);
11431184 /// ```
11441185 #[ inline( always) ]
@@ -1162,7 +1203,10 @@ impl<Ptr: Deref<Target: Unpin>> Pin<Ptr> {
11621203 ///
11631204 /// let mut val: u8 = 5;
11641205 /// let pinned: Pin<&mut u8> = Pin::new(&mut val);
1165- /// // Unwrap the pin to get a reference to the value
1206+ ///
1207+ /// // Unwrap the pin to get the underlying mutable reference to the value. We can do
1208+ /// // this because `val` doesn't care about being moved, so the `Pin` was just
1209+ /// // a "facade" anyway.
11661210 /// let r = Pin::into_inner(pinned);
11671211 /// assert_eq!(*r, 5);
11681212 /// ```
@@ -1318,7 +1362,7 @@ impl<Ptr: Deref> Pin<Ptr> {
13181362 unsafe { Pin :: new_unchecked ( & * self . pointer ) }
13191363 }
13201364
1321- /// Unwraps this `Pin<Ptr>` returning the underlying pointer .
1365+ /// Unwraps this `Pin<Ptr>`, returning the underlying `Ptr` .
13221366 ///
13231367 /// # Safety
13241368 ///
@@ -1331,7 +1375,7 @@ impl<Ptr: Deref> Pin<Ptr> {
13311375 ///
13321376 /// Note that you must be able to guarantee that the data pointed to by `Ptr`
13331377 /// will be treated as pinned all the way until its `drop` handler is complete!
1334- ///
1378+ ///
13351379 /// *For more information, see the [`pin` module docs][self]*
13361380 ///
13371381 /// If the underlying data is [`Unpin`], [`Pin::into_inner`] should be used
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