Advanced Lifetimes
In Chapter 10 in the “Validating References with Lifetimes” section, you learned how to annotate references with lifetime parameters to tell Rust how lifetimes of different references relate. You saw how every reference has a lifetime, but most of the time, Rust will let you elide lifetimes. Now we’ll look at three advanced features of lifetimes that we haven’t covered yet:
- Lifetime subtyping: ensures that one lifetime outlives another lifetime
- Lifetime bounds: specifies a lifetime for a reference to a generic type
- Inference of trait object lifetimes: allows the compiler to infer trait object lifetimes and when they need to be specified
Ensuring One Lifetime Outlives Another with Lifetime Subtyping
Lifetime subtyping specifies that one lifetime should outlive another
lifetime. To explore lifetime subtyping, imagine we want to write a parser.
We’ll use a structure called Context
that holds a reference to the string
we’re parsing. We’ll write a parser that will parse this string and return
success or failure. The parser will need to borrow the Context
to do the
parsing. Listing 19-12 implements this parser code, except the code doesn’t
have the required lifetime annotations, so it won’t compile.
Filename: src/lib.rs
struct Context(&str);
struct Parser {
context: &Context,
}
impl Parser {
fn parse(&self) -> Result<(), &str> {
Err(&self.context.0[1..])
}
}
Compiling the code results in errors because Rust expects lifetime parameters
on the string slice in Context
and the reference to a Context
in Parser
.
For simplicity’s sake, the parse
function returns Result<(), &str>
. That
is, the function will do nothing on success and, on failure, will return the
part of the string slice that didn’t parse correctly. A real implementation
would provide more error information and would return a structured data type
when parsing succeeds. We won’t be discussing those details because they aren’t
relevant to the lifetimes part of this example.
To keep this code simple, we won’t write any parsing logic. However, it’s very likely that somewhere in the parsing logic we would handle invalid input by returning an error that references the part of the input that is invalid; this reference is what makes the code example interesting in regard to lifetimes. Let’s pretend that the logic of our parser is that the input is invalid after the first byte. Note that this code might panic if the first byte is not on a valid character boundary; again, we’re simplifying the example to focus on the lifetimes involved.
To get this code to compile, we need to fill in the lifetime parameters for the
string slice in Context
and the reference to the Context
in Parser
. The
most straightforward way to do this is to use the same lifetime name
everywhere, as shown in Listing 19-13. Recall from the “Lifetime Annotations in
Struct Definitions” section in Chapter 10 that each of struct Context<'a>
,
struct Parser<'a>
, and impl<'a>
is declaring a new lifetime parameter.
While their names happen to all be the same, the three lifetime parameters
declared in this example aren’t related.
Filename: src/lib.rs
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { struct Context<'a>(&'a str); struct Parser<'a> { context: &'a Context<'a>, } impl<'a> Parser<'a> { fn parse(&self) -> Result<(), &str> { Err(&self.context.0[1..]) } } #}
This code compiles just fine. It tells Rust that a Parser
holds a reference
to a Context
with lifetime 'a
and that Context
holds a string slice that
also lives as long as the reference to the Context
in Parser
. Rust’s
compiler error message stated that lifetime parameters were required for these
references, and we’ve now added lifetime parameters.
Next, in Listing 19-14, we’ll add a function that takes an instance of
Context
, uses a Parser
to parse that context, and returns what parse
returns. This code doesn’t quite work.
Filename: src/lib.rs
fn parse_context(context: Context) -> Result<(), &str> {
Parser { context: &context }.parse()
}
We get two verbose errors when we try to compile the code with the addition of
the parse_context
function:
error[E0597]: borrowed value does not live long enough
--> src/lib.rs:14:5
|
14 | Parser { context: &context }.parse()
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ does not live long enough
15 | }
| - temporary value only lives until here
|
note: borrowed value must be valid for the anonymous lifetime #1 defined on the function body at 13:1...
--> src/lib.rs:13:1
|
13 | / fn parse_context(context: Context) -> Result<(), &str> {
14 | | Parser { context: &context }.parse()
15 | | }
| |_^
error[E0597]: `context` does not live long enough
--> src/lib.rs:14:24
|
14 | Parser { context: &context }.parse()
| ^^^^^^^ does not live long enough
15 | }
| - borrowed value only lives until here
|
note: borrowed value must be valid for the anonymous lifetime #1 defined on the function body at 13:1...
--> src/lib.rs:13:1
|
13 | / fn parse_context(context: Context) -> Result<(), &str> {
14 | | Parser { context: &context }.parse()
15 | | }
| |_^
These errors state that the Parser
instance that is created and the context
parameter live only until the end of the parse_context
function. But they
both need to live for the entire lifetime of the function.
In other words, Parser
and context
need to outlive the entire function
and be valid before the function starts as well as after it ends for all the
references in this code to always be valid. The Parser
we’re creating and the
context
parameter go out of scope at the end of the function, because
parse_context
takes ownership of context
.
To figure out why these errors occur, let’s look at the definitions in Listing
19-13 again, specifically the references in the signature of the parse
method:
fn parse(&self) -> Result<(), &str> {
Remember the elision rules? If we annotate the lifetimes of the references rather than eliding, the signature would be as follows:
fn parse<'a>(&'a self) -> Result<(), &'a str> {
That is, the error part of the return value of parse
has a lifetime that is
tied to the lifetime of the Parser
instance (that of &self
in the parse
method signature). That makes sense: the returned string slice references the
string slice in the Context
instance held by the Parser
, and the definition
of the Parser
struct specifies that the lifetime of the reference to
Context
and the lifetime of the string slice that Context
holds should be
the same.
The problem is that the parse_context
function returns the value returned
from parse
, so the lifetime of the return value of parse_context
is tied to
the lifetime of the Parser
as well. But the Parser
instance created in the
parse_context
function won’t live past the end of the function (it’s
temporary), and context
will go out of scope at the end of the function
(parse_context
takes ownership of it).
Rust thinks we’re trying to return a reference to a value that goes out of
scope at the end of the function, because we annotated all the lifetimes with
the same lifetime parameter. The annotations told Rust the lifetime of the
string slice that Context
holds is the same as that of the lifetime of the
reference to Context
that Parser
holds.
The parse_context
function can’t see that within the parse
function, the
string slice returned will outlive Context
and Parser
and that the
reference parse_context
returns refers to the string slice, not to Context
or Parser
.
By knowing what the implementation of parse
does, we know that the only
reason the return value of parse
is tied to the Parser
instance is that
it’s referencing the Parser
instance’s Context
, which is referencing the
string slice. So, it’s really the lifetime of the string slice that
parse_context
needs to care about. We need a way to tell Rust that the string
slice in Context
and the reference to the Context
in Parser
have
different lifetimes and that the return value of parse_context
is tied to the
lifetime of the string slice in Context
.
First, we’ll try giving Parser
and Context
different lifetime parameters,
as shown in Listing 19-15. We’ll use 's
and 'c
as lifetime parameter names
to clarify which lifetime goes with the string slice in Context
and which
goes with the reference to Context
in Parser
. Note that this solution won’t
completely fix the problem, but it’s a start. We’ll look at why this fix isn’t
sufficient when we try to compile.
Filename: src/lib.rs
struct Context<'s>(&'s str);
struct Parser<'c, 's> {
context: &'c Context<'s>,
}
impl<'c, 's> Parser<'c, 's> {
fn parse(&self) -> Result<(), &'s str> {
Err(&self.context.0[1..])
}
}
fn parse_context(context: Context) -> Result<(), &str> {
Parser { context: &context }.parse()
}
We’ve annotated the lifetimes of the references in all the same places that we
annotated them in Listing 19-13. But this time we used different parameters
depending on whether the reference goes with the string slice or with
Context
. We’ve also added an annotation to the string slice part of the
return value of parse
to indicate that it goes with the lifetime of the
string slice in Context
.
When we try to compile now, we get the following error:
error[E0491]: in type `&'c Context<'s>`, reference has a longer lifetime than the data it references
--> src/lib.rs:4:5
|
4 | context: &'c Context<'s>,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: the pointer is valid for the lifetime 'c as defined on the struct at 3:1
--> src/lib.rs:3:1
|
3 | / struct Parser<'c, 's> {
4 | | context: &'c Context<'s>,
5 | | }
| |_^
note: but the referenced data is only valid for the lifetime 's as defined on the struct at 3:1
--> src/lib.rs:3:1
|
3 | / struct Parser<'c, 's> {
4 | | context: &'c Context<'s>,
5 | | }
| |_^
Rust doesn’t know of any relationship between 'c
and 's
. To be valid, the
referenced data in Context
with lifetime 's
needs to be constrained to
guarantee that it lives longer than the reference with lifetime 'c
. If 's
is not longer than 'c
, the reference to Context
might not be valid.
Now we get to the point of this section: the Rust feature lifetime
subtyping specifies that one lifetime parameter lives at least as long as
another one. In the angle brackets where we declare lifetime parameters, we can
declare a lifetime 'a
as usual and declare a lifetime 'b
that lives at
least as long as 'a
by declaring 'b
using the syntax 'b: 'a
.
In our definition of Parser
, to say that 's
(the lifetime of the string
slice) is guaranteed to live at least as long as 'c
(the lifetime of the
reference to Context
), we change the lifetime declarations to look like this:
Filename: src/lib.rs
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { # struct Context<'a>(&'a str); # struct Parser<'c, 's: 'c> { context: &'c Context<'s>, } #}
Now the reference to Context
in the Parser
and the reference to the string
slice in the Context
have different lifetimes; we’ve ensured that the
lifetime of the string slice is longer than the reference to the Context
.
That was a very long-winded example, but as we mentioned at the start of this chapter, Rust’s advanced features are very specific. You won’t often need the syntax we described in this example, but in such situations, you’ll know how to refer to something and give it the necessary lifetime.
Lifetime Bounds on References to Generic Types
In the “Trait Bounds” section in Chapter 10, we discussed using trait bounds on generic types. We can also add lifetime parameters as constraints on generic types; these are called lifetime bounds. Lifetime bounds help Rust verify that references in generic types won’t outlive the data they’re referencing.
As an example, consider a type that is a wrapper over references. Recall the
RefCell<T>
type from the “RefCell<T>
and the Interior Mutability Pattern”
section in Chapter 15: its borrow
and borrow_mut
methods return the types
Ref
and RefMut
, respectively. These types are wrappers over references that
keep track of the borrowing rules at runtime. The definition of the Ref
struct is shown in Listing 19-16, without lifetime bounds for now.
Filename: src/lib.rs
struct Ref<'a, T>(&'a T);
Without explicitly constraining the lifetime 'a
in relation to the generic
parameter T
, Rust will error because it doesn’t know how long the generic
type T
will live:
error[E0309]: the parameter type `T` may not live long enough
--> src/lib.rs:1:19
|
1 | struct Ref<'a, T>(&'a T);
| ^^^^^^
|
= help: consider adding an explicit lifetime bound `T: 'a`...
note: ...so that the reference type `&'a T` does not outlive the data it points at
--> src/lib.rs:1:19
|
1 | struct Ref<'a, T>(&'a T);
| ^^^^^^
Because T
can be any type, T
could be a reference or a type that holds one
or more references, each of which could have their own lifetimes. Rust can’t be
sure T
will live as long as 'a
.
Fortunately, the error provides helpful advice on how to specify the lifetime bound in this case:
consider adding an explicit lifetime bound `T: 'a` so that the reference type
`&'a T` does not outlive the data it points at
Listing 19-17 shows how to apply this advice by specifying the lifetime bound
when we declare the generic type T
.
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { struct Ref<'a, T: 'a>(&'a T); #}
This code now compiles because the T: 'a
syntax specifies that T
can be any
type, but if it contains any references, the references must live at least as
long as 'a
.
We could solve this problem in a different way, as shown in the definition of a
StaticRef
struct in Listing 19-18, by adding the 'static
lifetime bound on
T
. This means if T
contains any references, they must have the 'static
lifetime.
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { struct StaticRef<T: 'static>(&'static T); #}
Because 'static
means the reference must live as long as the entire program,
a type that contains no references meets the criteria of all references living
as long as the entire program (because there are no references). For the borrow
checker concerned about references living long enough, there is no real
distinction between a type that has no references and a type that has
references that live forever: both are the same for determining whether or not
a reference has a shorter lifetime than what it refers to.
Inference of Trait Object Lifetimes
In Chapter 17 in the “Using Trait Objects that Allow for Values of Different
Types” section, we discussed trait objects, consisting of a trait behind a
reference, that allow us to use dynamic dispatch. We haven’t yet discussed what
happens if the type implementing the trait in the trait object has a lifetime
of its own. Consider Listing 19-19 where we have a trait Red
and a struct
Ball
. The Ball
struct holds a reference (and thus has a lifetime parameter)
and also implements trait Red
. We want to use an instance of Ball
as the
trait object Box<Red>
.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Red { } struct Ball<'a> { diameter: &'a i32, } impl<'a> Red for Ball<'a> { } fn main() { let num = 5; let obj = Box::new(Ball { diameter: &num }) as Box<Red>; }
This code compiles without any errors, even though we haven’t explicitly
annotated the lifetimes involved in obj
. This code works because there are
rules for working with lifetimes and trait objects:
- The default lifetime of a trait object is
'static
. - With
&'a Trait
or&'a mut Trait
, the default lifetime of the trait object is'a
. - With a single
T: 'a
clause, the default lifetime of the trait object is'a
. - With multiple clauses like
T: 'a
, there is no default lifetime; we must be explicit.
When we must be explicit, we can add a lifetime bound on a trait object like
Box<Red>
using the syntax Box<Red + 'static>
or Box<Red + 'a>
, depending
on whether the reference lives for the entire program or not. As with the other
bounds, the syntax adding a lifetime bound means that any implementor of the
Red
trait that has references inside the type must have the same lifetime
specified in the trait object bounds as those references.
Next, let’s look at some other advanced features that manage traits.