- Feature Name:
unsafe_attributes
- Start Date: 2022-10-11
- RFC PR: rust-lang/rfcs#3325
- Tracking Issue: rust-lang/rust#123757
Summary
Consider some attributes ‘unsafe’, so that they must only be used like this:
#[unsafe(no_mangle)]
Motivation
Some of our attributes, such as no_mangle
, can be used to
cause Undefined Behavior without any unsafe
block.
If this was regular code we would require them to be placed in an unsafe {}
block, but since they are attributes that makes less sense. Hence we need a
concept of ‘unsafe attributes’ and accompanying syntax to declare that one is
aware of the UB risks here (and it might be good to add a SAFETY comment
explaining why this use of the attribute is fine).
Guide-level explanation
Example explanation for no_mangle
; the other attributes need something similar.
When declaring a function like this
#[no_mangle]
pub fn write(...) { ... }
this will cause Rust to generate a globally visible function with the
linker/export name write
. As consequence of that, other code that wants to
call the
POSIX write
function might
end up calling this other write
instead. This can easily lead to Undefined
Behavior:
- The other
write
might have the wrong signature, so arguments are passed incorrectly. - The other
write
might not have the expected behavior of write, causing code relying on this behavior to misbehave.
To avoid this, when declaring a function no_mangle
, it is important that the
name of the function does not clash with other globally named functions. Similar
to how unsafe { ... }
blocks are used to acknowledge that this code is
dangerous and needs manual checking, unsafe(no_mangle)
acknowledges that
no_mangle
is dangerous and needs to be manually checked for correctness:
// SAFETY: there is no other global function of this name
#[unsafe(no_mangle)]
pub fn my_own_write(...) { ... }
Note that when writing a library crate, it is in general not possible to make
claims like “there is no other global function of this name”. This is a
fundamental limitation of the global linking namespace, and not something Rust
currently is able to overcome. Libraries that make such assumptions should
ideally document somewhere publicly that they consider some namespace, i.e.
every function starting with _mycrate__
, to be reserved for their exclusive
use.
Reference-level explanation
Some attributes (e.g. no_mangle
, export_name
, link_section
– see
here for a more complete list)
are considered “unsafe” attributes. An unsafe attribute must only be used inside
unsafe(...)
in the attribute declaration, like
#[unsafe(no_mangle)]
For backwards compatibility reasons, using these attributes outside of
unsafe(...)
is just a lint, not a hard error. The lint is called
unsafe_attr_outside_unsafe
. Initially, this lint will be allow-by-default.
Unsafe attributes that are added in the future can hard-require unsafe
from
the start since the backwards compatibility concern does not apply to them.
The 2024 edition is also expected to increase the severity of this lint,
possibly even making it a hard error.
Syntactically, for each unsafe attribute attr
, we now also accept
unsafe(attr)
anywhere that attr
can be used (in particular, inside
cfg_attr
). unsafe
cannot be nested, cannot contain cfg_attr
, and cannot
contain any other (non-unsafe) attributes. Only a single attribute can be used
inside unsafe
, i.e., unsafe(foo, bar)
is invalid.
The deny(unsafe_code)
lint denies the use of unsafe attributes both inside and
outside of unsafe(...)
blocks. (That lint currently has special handling to
deny these attributes. Once there is a general notion of ‘unsafe attributes’ as
proposed by this RFC, that special handling should no longer be needed.)
The unsafe(...)
attribute block is required even for functions declared inside
an unsafe
block. That is, the following is an error:
fn outer() {
unsafe {
#[no_mangle]
fn write() {}
}
}
This matches the fact that expression-level unsafety is not inherited for items declared inside other items.
Drawbacks
I think if we had thought of this around Rust 1.0, then this would be rather
uncontroversial. As things stand now, this proposal will cause a lot of churn
since all existing uses of these unsafe attributes need to be adjusted. The
warning for using unsafe attributes outside unsafe(...)
should probably have
an auto-fix available to help ease the transition here.
Rationale and alternatives
- Nothing. We could do nothing at all, and live with the status quo. However
then we will not be able to fix issues like
no_mangle
being unsound, which is one of the oldest open soundness issues. - Rename. We could just rename the attributes to
unsafe_no_mangle
etc. However that is inconsistent with how we approachunsafe
on expressions, and feels much less systematic and much more ad-hoc. deny(unsafe_code)
. We already started the process of rejecting these attributes whendeny(unsafe_code)
is used. We could say that is enough. However the RFC authors thinks that is insufficient, since only few crates use that lint, and since it is the wrong default for Rust (users have to opt-in to a soundness-critical diagnostic – that’s totally against the “safety by default” goal of Rust). This RFC says that yes,deny(unsafe_code)
should deny those attributes, but we should go further and require an explicitunsafe(...)
attribute block for them to be used at all.- Item-level unsafe blocks. We could find some way to have ‘unsafe blocks’
around entire functions or modules. However, those would go against the usual
goal of keeping
unsafe
blocks small. Bigunsafe
blocks risk accidentally calling an unsafe operation in there without even realizing it. - Other syntax. Obviously we could pick a different syntax for the same concept, but this seems like the most natural marriage of the idea of unsafe blocks from regular code, and the existing attributes syntax.
Prior art
We have unsafe
blocks; this is basically the same thing for the “attributes
DSL”.
In the attribute DSL, we already have a “nesting” construct: cfg_attr
. That
allows terms like
#[cfg_attr(debug_assertions, deny(unsafe_code), allow(unused))]
, so there is
precedent for having a list of attributes inside a single attribute.
I don’t know of other languages that would distinguish safe and unsafe attributes.
Unresolved questions
- Different lint staging. The lint on using existing unsafe attributes like
no_mangle
outsideunsafe(...)
could be staged in various ways: it could be warn-by-default to start or we wait a while before to do that, it could be edition-dependent, it might eventually be deny-by-default or even a hard error on some editions – there are lots of details here, which can be determined later during the process.
Future possibilities
- Unsafe attribute proc macros. We could imagine something like
to declare that an attribute proc macro is unsafe to use, and must only occur as an unsafe macro. Such an unsafe-to-use attribute proc macro must declare in a comment what its safety requirements are. (This is the#[proc_macro_attribute(require_unsafe)] fn spoopy(args: TokenStream, input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {…}
unsafe
fromunsafe fn
, whereas the rest of the RFC is using theunsafe
fromunsafe { ... }
.) - Unsafe derive. We could use
#[unsafe(derive(Trait))]
to derive anunsafe impl
where the deriving macro itself cannot check all required safety conditions (i.e., this is ‘unsafe to derive’). - Unsafe tool attributes. Same as above, but for tool attributes.
- Unsafe attributes on statements. For now, the only unsafe attributes we
have don’t make sense on the statement level. Once we do have unsafe statement
attributes, we need to figure out whether inside
unsafe {}
blocks one still needs to also writeunsafe(...)
. - Lists and nesting. We could specify that
unsafe(...)
may contain a list of arbitrary attributes (including safe ones), may be nested, and may containcfg_attr
that gets expanded appropriately. However that could make it tricky to consistently support non-builtin unsafe attributes in the future, so the RFC proposes to not do that yet. The current approach is forward-compatible with allowing lists and nesting in the future. - Unsafe crates. Some attributes’ requirements cannot be fully discharged
locally. For instance, if a lib crate uses
no_mangle
, this really puts a burden on the author of the final binary to ensure that the symbol dos not conflict. In the future it would be better if rust tooling could automatically surface a such requirements to downstream code, for example by an automatic “unsafe attributes used” listing in a crate’s generated rustdoc.