The `Zeroable` type check uses a small dance with a raw pointer to aid
type inference. It turns out that this is not necessary and type
inference is powerful enough to resolve any ambiguity. Thus remove it.
Suggested-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Signed-off-by: Benno Lossin <lossin@kernel.org>
---
Changes in v2: added this patch
---
rust/pin-init/internal/src/init.rs | 7 +------
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 6 deletions(-)
diff --git a/rust/pin-init/internal/src/init.rs b/rust/pin-init/internal/src/init.rs
index 40df01635a3a..17ae7b2e4f70 100644
--- a/rust/pin-init/internal/src/init.rs
+++ b/rust/pin-init/internal/src/init.rs
@@ -415,17 +415,12 @@ fn make_field_check(
#[allow(unreachable_code, clippy::diverging_sub_expression, unused_assignments)]
// SAFETY: this code is never executed.
let _ = || unsafe {
- let mut zeroed = ::core::mem::zeroed();
- // We have to use type inference here to make zeroed have the correct type. This
- // does not get executed, so it has no effect.
- ::core::ptr::write(slot, zeroed);
- zeroed = ::core::mem::zeroed();
::core::ptr::write(slot, #path {
#(
#(#field_attrs)*
#field_name: ::core::panic!(),
)*
- ..zeroed
+ ..::core::mem::zeroed()
})
};
},
--
2.52.0