1// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5/* 6Package unsafe contains operations that step around the type safety of Go programs. 7 8Packages that import unsafe may be non-portable and are not protected by the 9Go 1 compatibility guidelines. 10*/ 11package unsafe 12 13// ArbitraryType is here for the purposes of documentation only and is not actually 14// part of the unsafe package. It represents the type of an arbitrary Go expression. 15type ArbitraryType int 16 17// IntegerType is here for the purposes of documentation only and is not actually 18// part of the unsafe package. It represents any arbitrary integer type. 19type IntegerType int 20 21// Pointer represents a pointer to an arbitrary type. There are four special operations 22// available for type Pointer that are not available for other types: 23// - A pointer value of any type can be converted to a Pointer. 24// - A Pointer can be converted to a pointer value of any type. 25// - A uintptr can be converted to a Pointer. 26// - A Pointer can be converted to a uintptr. 27// 28// Pointer therefore allows a program to defeat the type system and read and write 29// arbitrary memory. It should be used with extreme care. 30// 31// The following patterns involving Pointer are valid. 32// Code not using these patterns is likely to be invalid today 33// or to become invalid in the future. 34// Even the valid patterns below come with important caveats. 35// 36// Running "go vet" can help find uses of Pointer that do not conform to these patterns, 37// but silence from "go vet" is not a guarantee that the code is valid. 38// 39// (1) Conversion of a *T1 to Pointer to *T2. 40// 41// Provided that T2 is no larger than T1 and that the two share an equivalent 42// memory layout, this conversion allows reinterpreting data of one type as 43// data of another type. An example is the implementation of 44// math.Float64bits: 45// 46// func Float64bits(f float64) uint64 { 47// return *(*uint64)(unsafe.Pointer(&f)) 48// } 49// 50// (2) Conversion of a Pointer to a uintptr (but not back to Pointer). 51// 52// Converting a Pointer to a uintptr produces the memory address of the value 53// pointed at, as an integer. The usual use for such a uintptr is to print it. 54// 55// Conversion of a uintptr back to Pointer is not valid in general. 56// 57// A uintptr is an integer, not a reference. 58// Converting a Pointer to a uintptr creates an integer value 59// with no pointer semantics. 60// Even if a uintptr holds the address of some object, 61// the garbage collector will not update that uintptr's value 62// if the object moves, nor will that uintptr keep the object 63// from being reclaimed. 64// 65// The remaining patterns enumerate the only valid conversions 66// from uintptr to Pointer. 67// 68// (3) Conversion of a Pointer to a uintptr and back, with arithmetic. 69// 70// If p points into an allocated object, it can be advanced through the object 71// by conversion to uintptr, addition of an offset, and conversion back to Pointer. 72// 73// p = unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(p) + offset) 74// 75// The most common use of this pattern is to access fields in a struct 76// or elements of an array: 77// 78// // equivalent to f := unsafe.Pointer(&s.f) 79// f := unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&s)) + unsafe.Offsetof(s.f)) 80// 81// // equivalent to e := unsafe.Pointer(&x[i]) 82// e := unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&x[0])) + i*unsafe.Sizeof(x[0])) 83// 84// It is valid both to add and to subtract offsets from a pointer in this way. 85// It is also valid to use &^ to round pointers, usually for alignment. 86// In all cases, the result must continue to point into the original allocated object. 87// 88// Unlike in C, it is not valid to advance a pointer just beyond the end of 89// its original allocation: 90// 91// // INVALID: end points outside allocated space. 92// var s thing 93// end = unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&s)) + unsafe.Sizeof(s)) 94// 95// // INVALID: end points outside allocated space. 96// b := make([]byte, n) 97// end = unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&b[0])) + uintptr(n)) 98// 99// Note that both conversions must appear in the same expression, with only 100// the intervening arithmetic between them: 101// 102// // INVALID: uintptr cannot be stored in variable 103// // before conversion back to Pointer. 104// u := uintptr(p) 105// p = unsafe.Pointer(u + offset) 106// 107// Note that the pointer must point into an allocated object, so it may not be nil. 108// 109// // INVALID: conversion of nil pointer 110// u := unsafe.Pointer(nil) 111// p := unsafe.Pointer(uintptr(u) + offset) 112// 113// (4) Conversion of a Pointer to a uintptr when calling functions like [syscall.Syscall]. 114// 115// The Syscall functions in package syscall pass their uintptr arguments directly 116// to the operating system, which then may, depending on the details of the call, 117// reinterpret some of them as pointers. 118// That is, the system call implementation is implicitly converting certain arguments 119// back from uintptr to pointer. 120// 121// If a pointer argument must be converted to uintptr for use as an argument, 122// that conversion must appear in the call expression itself: 123// 124// syscall.Syscall(SYS_READ, uintptr(fd), uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(p)), uintptr(n)) 125// 126// The compiler handles a Pointer converted to a uintptr in the argument list of 127// a call to a function implemented in assembly by arranging that the referenced 128// allocated object, if any, is retained and not moved until the call completes, 129// even though from the types alone it would appear that the object is no longer 130// needed during the call. 131// 132// For the compiler to recognize this pattern, 133// the conversion must appear in the argument list: 134// 135// // INVALID: uintptr cannot be stored in variable 136// // before implicit conversion back to Pointer during system call. 137// u := uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(p)) 138// syscall.Syscall(SYS_READ, uintptr(fd), u, uintptr(n)) 139// 140// (5) Conversion of the result of [reflect.Value.Pointer] or [reflect.Value.UnsafeAddr] 141// from uintptr to Pointer. 142// 143// Package reflect's Value methods named Pointer and UnsafeAddr return type uintptr 144// instead of unsafe.Pointer to keep callers from changing the result to an arbitrary 145// type without first importing "unsafe". However, this means that the result is 146// fragile and must be converted to Pointer immediately after making the call, 147// in the same expression: 148// 149// p := (*int)(unsafe.Pointer(reflect.ValueOf(new(int)).Pointer())) 150// 151// As in the cases above, it is invalid to store the result before the conversion: 152// 153// // INVALID: uintptr cannot be stored in variable 154// // before conversion back to Pointer. 155// u := reflect.ValueOf(new(int)).Pointer() 156// p := (*int)(unsafe.Pointer(u)) 157// 158// (6) Conversion of a [reflect.SliceHeader] or [reflect.StringHeader] Data field to or from Pointer. 159// 160// As in the previous case, the reflect data structures SliceHeader and StringHeader 161// declare the field Data as a uintptr to keep callers from changing the result to 162// an arbitrary type without first importing "unsafe". However, this means that 163// SliceHeader and StringHeader are only valid when interpreting the content 164// of an actual slice or string value. 165// 166// var s string 167// hdr := (*reflect.StringHeader)(unsafe.Pointer(&s)) // case 1 168// hdr.Data = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(p)) // case 6 (this case) 169// hdr.Len = n 170// 171// In this usage hdr.Data is really an alternate way to refer to the underlying 172// pointer in the string header, not a uintptr variable itself. 173// 174// In general, [reflect.SliceHeader] and [reflect.StringHeader] should be used 175// only as *reflect.SliceHeader and *reflect.StringHeader pointing at actual 176// slices or strings, never as plain structs. 177// A program should not declare or allocate variables of these struct types. 178// 179// // INVALID: a directly-declared header will not hold Data as a reference. 180// var hdr reflect.StringHeader 181// hdr.Data = uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(p)) 182// hdr.Len = n 183// s := *(*string)(unsafe.Pointer(&hdr)) // p possibly already lost 184type Pointer *ArbitraryType 185 186// Sizeof takes an expression x of any type and returns the size in bytes 187// of a hypothetical variable v as if v was declared via var v = x. 188// The size does not include any memory possibly referenced by x. 189// For instance, if x is a slice, Sizeof returns the size of the slice 190// descriptor, not the size of the memory referenced by the slice; 191// if x is an interface, Sizeof returns the size of the interface value itself, 192// not the size of the value stored in the interface. 193// For a struct, the size includes any padding introduced by field alignment. 194// The return value of Sizeof is a Go constant if the type of the argument x 195// does not have variable size. 196// (A type has variable size if it is a type parameter or if it is an array 197// or struct type with elements of variable size). 198func Sizeof(x ArbitraryType) uintptr 199 200// Offsetof returns the offset within the struct of the field represented by x, 201// which must be of the form structValue.field. In other words, it returns the 202// number of bytes between the start of the struct and the start of the field. 203// The return value of Offsetof is a Go constant if the type of the argument x 204// does not have variable size. 205// (See the description of [Sizeof] for a definition of variable sized types.) 206func Offsetof(x ArbitraryType) uintptr 207 208// Alignof takes an expression x of any type and returns the required alignment 209// of a hypothetical variable v as if v was declared via var v = x. 210// It is the largest value m such that the address of v is always zero mod m. 211// It is the same as the value returned by [reflect.TypeOf](x).Align(). 212// As a special case, if a variable s is of struct type and f is a field 213// within that struct, then Alignof(s.f) will return the required alignment 214// of a field of that type within a struct. This case is the same as the 215// value returned by [reflect.TypeOf](s.f).FieldAlign(). 216// The return value of Alignof is a Go constant if the type of the argument 217// does not have variable size. 218// (See the description of [Sizeof] for a definition of variable sized types.) 219func Alignof(x ArbitraryType) uintptr 220 221// The function Add adds len to ptr and returns the updated pointer 222// [Pointer](uintptr(ptr) + uintptr(len)). 223// The len argument must be of integer type or an untyped constant. 224// A constant len argument must be representable by a value of type int; 225// if it is an untyped constant it is given type int. 226// The rules for valid uses of Pointer still apply. 227func Add(ptr Pointer, len IntegerType) Pointer 228 229// The function Slice returns a slice whose underlying array starts at ptr 230// and whose length and capacity are len. 231// Slice(ptr, len) is equivalent to 232// 233// (*[len]ArbitraryType)(unsafe.Pointer(ptr))[:] 234// 235// except that, as a special case, if ptr is nil and len is zero, 236// Slice returns nil. 237// 238// The len argument must be of integer type or an untyped constant. 239// A constant len argument must be non-negative and representable by a value of type int; 240// if it is an untyped constant it is given type int. 241// At run time, if len is negative, or if ptr is nil and len is not zero, 242// a run-time panic occurs. 243func Slice(ptr *ArbitraryType, len IntegerType) []ArbitraryType 244 245// SliceData returns a pointer to the underlying array of the argument 246// slice. 247// - If cap(slice) > 0, SliceData returns &slice[:1][0]. 248// - If slice == nil, SliceData returns nil. 249// - Otherwise, SliceData returns a non-nil pointer to an 250// unspecified memory address. 251func SliceData(slice []ArbitraryType) *ArbitraryType 252 253// String returns a string value whose underlying bytes 254// start at ptr and whose length is len. 255// 256// The len argument must be of integer type or an untyped constant. 257// A constant len argument must be non-negative and representable by a value of type int; 258// if it is an untyped constant it is given type int. 259// At run time, if len is negative, or if ptr is nil and len is not zero, 260// a run-time panic occurs. 261// 262// Since Go strings are immutable, the bytes passed to String 263// must not be modified as long as the returned string value exists. 264func String(ptr *byte, len IntegerType) string 265 266// StringData returns a pointer to the underlying bytes of str. 267// For an empty string the return value is unspecified, and may be nil. 268// 269// Since Go strings are immutable, the bytes returned by StringData 270// must not be modified. 271func StringData(str string) *byte 272