Memory-unsafe code
Sometimes for efficiency you may want to write low-level code that can potentially corrupt memory or be vulnerable to security exploits. V supports writing such code, but not by default.
V requires that any potentially memory-unsafe operations are marked intentionally. Marking them also indicates to anyone reading the code that there could be memory-safety violations if there was a mistake.
Examples of potentially memory-unsafe operations are:
- Pointer arithmetic
- Pointer indexing
- Conversion to pointer from an incompatible type
- Calling certain C functions, e.g.
free
,strlen
andstrncmp
.
To mark potentially memory-unsafe operations, enclose them in an unsafe
block:
// allocate 2 uninitialized bytes & return a reference to them
mut p := unsafe { malloc(2) }
p[0] = `h` // Error: pointer indexing is only allowed in `unsafe` blocks
unsafe {
p[0] = `h` // OK
p[1] = `i`
}
p++ // Error: pointer arithmetic is only allowed in `unsafe` blocks
unsafe {
p++ // OK
}
assert *p == `i`
Best practice is to avoid putting memory-safe expressions inside an unsafe
block, so that the reason for using unsafe
is as clear as possible. Generally any code you think is memory-safe should not be inside an unsafe
block, so the compiler can verify it.
If you suspect your program does violate memory-safety, you have a head start on finding the cause: look at the unsafe
blocks (and how they interact with surrounding code).
- Note: This is work in progress.