From 13c818fa27e4dd3994881fb2f45c2dea3d23363d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: projektir Date: Tue, 11 Apr 2017 22:29:42 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Updating docs for std::sync::Weak #29377 --- src/liballoc/arc.rs | 66 ++++++++++++++++++++++----------------------- 1 file changed, 33 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/liballoc/arc.rs b/src/liballoc/arc.rs index 28f6d97756f..182a107e3f7 100644 --- a/src/liballoc/arc.rs +++ b/src/liballoc/arc.rs @@ -165,18 +165,29 @@ unsafe impl Sync for Arc {} #[unstable(feature = "coerce_unsized", issue = "27732")] impl, U: ?Sized> CoerceUnsized> for Arc {} -/// A weak version of [`Arc`][arc]. +/// `Weak` is a version of [`Arc`] that holds a non-owning reference to the +/// managed value. The value is accessed by calling [`upgrade`] on the `Weak` +/// pointer, which returns an [`Option`]`<`[`Arc`]`>`. /// -/// `Weak` pointers do not count towards determining if the inner value -/// should be dropped. +/// Since a `Weak` reference does not count towards ownership, it will not +/// prevent the inner value from being dropped, and `Weak` itself makes no +/// guarantees about the value still being present and may return [`None`] +/// when [`upgrade`]d. /// -/// The typical way to obtain a `Weak` pointer is to call -/// [`Arc::downgrade`][downgrade]. +/// A `Weak` pointer is useful for keeping a temporary reference to the value +/// within [`Arc`] without extending its lifetime. It is also used to prevent +/// circular references between [`Arc`] pointers, since mutual owning references +/// would never allow either [`Arc`] to be dropped. For example, a tree could +/// have strong [`Arc`] pointers from parent nodes to children, and `Weak` +/// pointers from children back to their parents. /// -/// See the [`Arc`][arc] documentation for more details. +/// The typical way to obtain a `Weak` pointer is to call [`Arc::downgrade`]. /// -/// [arc]: struct.Arc.html -/// [downgrade]: struct.Arc.html#method.downgrade +/// [`Arc`]: struct.Arc.html +/// [`Arc::downgrade`]: struct.Arc.html#method.downgrade +/// [`upgrade`]: struct.Weak.html#method.upgrade +/// [`Option`]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html +/// [`None`]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html#variant.None #[stable(feature = "arc_weak", since = "1.4.0")] pub struct Weak { ptr: Shared>, @@ -766,14 +777,11 @@ fn drop(&mut self) { } impl Weak { - /// Constructs a new `Weak`, without an accompanying instance of `T`. - /// - /// This allocates memory for `T`, but does not initialize it. Calling - /// [`upgrade`][upgrade] on the return value always gives - /// [`None`][option]. + /// Constructs a new `Weak`, allocating memory for `T` without initializing + /// it. Calling [`upgrade`] on the return value always gives [`None`]. /// - /// [upgrade]: struct.Weak.html#method.upgrade - /// [option]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html + /// [`upgrade`]: struct.Weak.html#method.upgrade + /// [`None`]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html#variant.None /// /// # Examples /// @@ -798,13 +806,13 @@ pub fn new() -> Weak { } impl Weak { - /// Upgrades the `Weak` pointer to an [`Arc`][arc], if possible. + /// Attempts to upgrade the `Weak` pointer to an [`Arc`], extending + /// the lifetime of the value if successful. /// - /// Returns [`None`][option] if the strong count has reached zero and the - /// inner value was destroyed. + /// Returns [`None`] if the value has since been dropped. /// - /// [arc]: struct.Arc.html - /// [option]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html + /// [`Arc`]: struct.Arc.html + /// [`None`]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html#variant.None /// /// # Examples /// @@ -865,10 +873,7 @@ fn inner(&self) -> &ArcInner { #[stable(feature = "arc_weak", since = "1.4.0")] impl Clone for Weak { - /// Makes a clone of the `Weak` pointer. - /// - /// This creates another pointer to the same inner value, increasing the - /// weak reference count. + /// Makes a clone of the `Weak` pointer that points to the same value. /// /// # Examples /// @@ -900,14 +905,11 @@ fn clone(&self) -> Weak { #[stable(feature = "downgraded_weak", since = "1.10.0")] impl Default for Weak { - /// Constructs a new `Weak`, without an accompanying instance of `T`. + /// Constructs a new `Weak`, allocating memory for `T` without initializing + /// it. Calling [`upgrade`] on the return value always gives [`None`]. /// - /// This allocates memory for `T`, but does not initialize it. Calling - /// [`upgrade`][upgrade] on the return value always gives - /// [`None`][option]. - /// - /// [upgrade]: struct.Weak.html#method.upgrade - /// [option]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html + /// [`upgrade`]: struct.Weak.html#method.upgrade + /// [`None`]: ../../std/option/enum.Option.html#variant.None /// /// # Examples /// @@ -926,8 +928,6 @@ fn default() -> Weak { impl Drop for Weak { /// Drops the `Weak` pointer. /// - /// This will decrement the weak reference count. - /// /// # Examples /// /// ``` -- 2.44.0