IntoIter
Let's move on to writing iterators. iter
and iter_mut
have already been
written for us thanks to The Magic of Deref. However there's two interesting
iterators that Vec provides that slices can't: into_iter
and drain
.
IntoIter consumes the Vec by-value, and can consequently yield its elements by-value. In order to enable this, IntoIter needs to take control of Vec's allocation.
IntoIter needs to be DoubleEnded as well, to enable reading from both ends.
Reading from the back could just be implemented as calling pop
, but reading
from the front is harder. We could call remove(0)
but that would be insanely
expensive. Instead we're going to just use ptr::read to copy values out of
either end of the Vec without mutating the buffer at all.
To do this we're going to use a very common C idiom for array iteration. We'll make two pointers; one that points to the start of the array, and one that points to one-element past the end. When we want an element from one end, we'll read out the value pointed to at that end and move the pointer over by one. When the two pointers are equal, we know we're done.
Note that the order of read and offset are reversed for next
and next_back
For next_back
the pointer is always after the element it wants to read next,
while for next
the pointer is always at the element it wants to read next.
To see why this is, consider the case where every element but one has been
yielded.
The array looks like this:
S E
[X, X, X, O, X, X, X]
If E pointed directly at the element it wanted to yield next, it would be indistinguishable from the case where there are no more elements to yield.
Although we don't actually care about it during iteration, we also need to hold onto the Vec's allocation information in order to free it once IntoIter is dropped.
So we're going to use the following struct:
struct IntoIter<T> {
buf: Unique<T>,
cap: usize,
start: *const T,
end: *const T,
}
And this is what we end up with for initialization:
impl<T> Vec<T> {
fn into_iter(self) -> IntoIter<T> {
// Can't destructure Vec since it's Drop
let ptr = self.ptr;
let cap = self.cap;
let len = self.len;
// Make sure not to drop Vec since that will free the buffer
mem::forget(self);
unsafe {
IntoIter {
buf: ptr,
cap: cap,
start: *ptr,
end: if cap == 0 {
// can't offset off this pointer, it's not allocated!
*ptr
} else {
ptr.offset(len as isize)
}
}
}
}
}
Here's iterating forward:
impl<T> Iterator for IntoIter<T> {
type Item = T;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
if self.start == self.end {
None
} else {
unsafe {
let result = ptr::read(self.start);
self.start = self.start.offset(1);
Some(result)
}
}
}
fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
let len = (self.end as usize - self.start as usize)
/ mem::size_of::<T>();
(len, Some(len))
}
}
And here's iterating backwards.
impl<T> DoubleEndedIterator for IntoIter<T> {
fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
if self.start == self.end {
None
} else {
unsafe {
self.end = self.end.offset(-1);
Some(ptr::read(self.end))
}
}
}
}
Because IntoIter takes ownership of its allocation, it needs to implement Drop to free it. However it also wants to implement Drop to drop any elements it contains that weren't yielded.
impl<T> Drop for IntoIter<T> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
if self.cap != 0 {
// drop any remaining elements
for _ in &mut *self {}
let align = mem::align_of::<T>();
let elem_size = mem::size_of::<T>();
let num_bytes = elem_size * self.cap;
unsafe {
heap::deallocate(self.buf.as_ptr() as *mut _, num_bytes, align);
}
}
}
}