Struct std::thread::LocalKey
pub struct LocalKey<T: 'static> { /* fields omitted */ }
A thread local storage key which owns its contents.
This key uses the fastest possible implementation available to it for the target platform. It is instantiated with the thread_local!
macro and the primary method is the with
method.
The with
method yields a reference to the contained value which cannot be sent across threads or escape the given closure.
Initialization and Destruction
Initialization is dynamically performed on the first call to with
within a thread, and values that implement Drop
get destructed when a thread exits. Some caveats apply, which are explained below.
A LocalKey
’s initializer cannot recursively depend on itself, and using a LocalKey
in this way will cause the initializer to infinitely recurse on the first call to with
.
Examples
use std::cell::RefCell; use std::thread; thread_local!(static FOO: RefCell<u32> = RefCell::new(1)); FOO.with(|f| { assert_eq!(*f.borrow(), 1); *f.borrow_mut() = 2; }); // each thread starts out with the initial value of 1 let t = thread::spawn(move|| { FOO.with(|f| { assert_eq!(*f.borrow(), 1); *f.borrow_mut() = 3; }); }); // wait for the thread to complete and bail out on panic t.join().unwrap(); // we retain our original value of 2 despite the child thread FOO.with(|f| { assert_eq!(*f.borrow(), 2); });
Platform-specific behavior
Note that a “best effort” is made to ensure that destructors for types stored in thread local storage are run, but not all platforms can guarantee that destructors will be run for all types in thread local storage. For example, there are a number of known caveats where destructors are not run:
- On Unix systems when pthread-based TLS is being used, destructors will not be run for TLS values on the main thread when it exits. Note that the application will exit immediately after the main thread exits as well.
- On all platforms it’s possible for TLS to re-initialize other TLS slots during destruction. Some platforms ensure that this cannot happen infinitely by preventing re-initialization of any slot that has been destroyed, but not all platforms have this guard. Those platforms that do not guard typically have a synthetic limit after which point no more destructors are run.
Implementations
impl<T: 'static> LocalKey<T>
Acquires a reference to the value in this TLS key.
This will lazily initialize the value if this thread has not referenced this key yet.
Panics
This function will panic!()
if the key currently has its destructor running, and it may panic if the destructor has previously been run for this thread.
Acquires a reference to the value in this TLS key.
This will lazily initialize the value if this thread has not referenced this key yet. If the key has been destroyed (which may happen if this is called in a destructor), this function will return an AccessError
.
Panics
This function will still panic!()
if the key is uninitialized and the key’s initializer panics.
Trait Implementations
impl<T: 'static> Debug for LocalKey<T>
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<T> RefUnwindSafe for LocalKey<T>
impl<T> Send for LocalKey<T>
impl<T> Sync for LocalKey<T>
impl<T> Unpin for LocalKey<T>
impl<T> UnwindSafe for LocalKey<T>
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> From<T> for T
pub fn from(t: T) -> T
Performs the conversion.
pub fn into(self) -> U
Performs the conversion.
type Error = Infallible
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
pub fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
Performs the conversion.
type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
pub fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>
Performs the conversion.
© 2010 The Rust Project Developers
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/thread/struct.LocalKey.html