static

Static variables will live during the whole execution of the program, and therefore will not move:

  1. static BANNER: &str = "Welcome to RustOS 3.14";
  2. fn main() {
  3.     println!("{BANNER}");
  4. }

As noted in the Rust RFC Book, these are not inlined upon use and have an actual associated memory location. This is useful for unsafe and embedded code, and the variable lives through the entirety of the program execution. When a globally-scoped value does not have a reason to need object identity, const is generally preferred.

This slide should take about 5 minutes.

  • static is similar to mutable global variables in C++.
  • static provides object identity: an address in memory and state as required by types with interior mutability such as Mutex<T>.

More to Explore

Because static variables are accessible from any thread, they must be Sync. Interior mutability is possible through a Mutex, atomic or similar.

Thread-local data can be created with the macro std::thread_local.