Interior Mutability
Rust provides a few safe means of modifying a value given only a shared reference to that value. All of these replace compile-time checks with runtime checks.
Cell
and RefCell
Cell
and
RefCell
implement
what Rust calls interior mutability: mutation of values in an immutable
context.
Cell
is typically used for simple types, as it requires copying or moving
values. More complex interior types typically use RefCell
, which tracks shared
and exclusive references at runtime and panics if they are misused.
use std::cell::RefCell; use std::rc::Rc; #[derive(Debug, Default)] struct Node { value: i64, children: Vec<Rc<RefCell<Node>>>, } impl Node { fn new(value: i64) -> Rc<RefCell<Node>> { Rc::new(RefCell::new(Node { value, ..Node::default() })) } fn sum(&self) -> i64 { self.value + self.children.iter().map(|c| c.borrow().sum()).sum::<i64>() } } fn main() { let root = Node::new(1); root.borrow_mut().children.push(Node::new(5)); let subtree = Node::new(10); subtree.borrow_mut().children.push(Node::new(11)); subtree.borrow_mut().children.push(Node::new(12)); root.borrow_mut().children.push(subtree); println!("graph: {root:#?}"); println!("graph sum: {}", root.borrow().sum()); }
This slide should take about 10 minutes.
- If we were using
Cell
instead ofRefCell
in this example, we would have to move theNode
out of theRc
to push children, then move it back in. This is safe because there’s always one, un-referenced value in the cell, but it’s not ergonomic. - To do anything with a Node, you must call a
RefCell
method, usuallyborrow
orborrow_mut
. - Demonstrate that reference loops can be created by adding
root
tosubtree.children
(don’t try to print it!). - To demonstrate a runtime panic, add a
fn inc(&mut self)
that incrementsself.value
and calls the same method on its children. This will panic in the presence of the reference loop, withthread 'main' panicked at 'already borrowed: BorrowMutError'
.