| // Demonstrate that having a trait bound causes dropck to reject code |
| // that might indirectly access previously dropped value. |
| // |
| // Compare with run-pass/issue28498-ugeh-with-trait-bound.rs |
| |
| use std::fmt; |
| |
| #[derive(Debug)] |
| struct ScribbleOnDrop(String); |
| |
| impl Drop for ScribbleOnDrop { |
| fn drop(&mut self) { |
| self.0 = format!("DROPPED"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| struct Foo<T: fmt::Debug>(u32, T); |
| |
| impl<T: fmt::Debug> Drop for Foo<T> { |
| fn drop(&mut self) { |
| // Use of `may_dangle` is unsound, because we access `T` fmt method when we pass |
| // `self.1` below, and thus potentially read from borrowed data. |
| println!("Dropping Foo({}, {:?})", self.0, self.1); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| fn main() { |
| let (last_dropped, foo0); |
| let (foo1, first_dropped); |
| |
| last_dropped = ScribbleOnDrop(format!("last")); |
| first_dropped = ScribbleOnDrop(format!("first")); |
| foo0 = Foo(0, &last_dropped); // OK |
| foo1 = Foo(1, &first_dropped); |
| //~^ ERROR `first_dropped` does not live long enough |
| |
| println!("foo0.1: {:?} foo1.1: {:?}", foo0.1, foo1.1); |
| } |