Trait std::marker::Sync 1.0.0
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#[lang = "sync"]pub unsafe trait Sync { }
Types for which it is safe to share references between threads.
This trait is automatically implemented when the compiler determines it's appropriate.
The precise definition is: a type T is Sync if &T is Send. In other words, if there is no possibility of undefined behavior (including data races) when passing &T references between threads.
As one would expect, primitive types like u8 and f64 are all Sync, and so are simple aggregate types containing them, like tuples, structs and enums. More examples of basic Sync types include "immutable" types like &T, and those with simple inherited mutability, such as Box<T>, Vec<T> and most other collection types. (Generic parameters need to be Sync for their container to be Sync.)
A somewhat surprising consequence of the definition is that &mut T is Sync (if T is Sync) even though it seems like that might provide unsynchronized mutation. The trick is that a mutable reference behind a shared reference (that is, & &mut T) becomes read-only, as if it were a & &T. Hence there is no risk of a data race.
Types that are not Sync are those that have "interior mutability" in a non-thread-safe form, such as cell::Cell and cell::RefCell. These types allow for mutation of their contents even through an immutable, shared reference. For example the set method on Cell<T> takes &self, so it requires only a shared reference &Cell<T>. The method performs no synchronization, thus Cell cannot be Sync.
Another example of a non-Sync type is the reference-counting pointer rc::Rc. Given any reference &Rc<T>, you can clone a new Rc<T>, modifying the reference counts in a non-atomic way.
For cases when one does need thread-safe interior mutability, Rust provides atomic data types, as well as explicit locking via sync::Mutex and sync::RWLock. These types ensure that any mutation cannot cause data races, hence the types are Sync. Likewise, sync::Arc provides a thread-safe analogue of Rc.
Any types with interior mutability must also use the cell::UnsafeCell wrapper around the value(s) which can be mutated through a shared reference. Failing to doing this is undefined behavior. For example, transmute-ing from &T to &mut T is invalid.
See the Nomicon for more details about Sync.
Implementors
impl<T> Sync for LinkedList<T> where T: Syncimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::collections::linked_list::Iter<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::collections::linked_list::IterMut<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl<'a> Sync for std::string::Drain<'a>impl<T> Sync for IntoIter<T> where T: Syncimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::vec::Drain<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::collections::vec_deque::Drain<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl<T> Sync for Arc<T> where T: Send + Sync + ?Sizedimpl<T> Sync for std::sync::Weak<T> where T: Send + Sync + ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for Rc<T> where T: ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for std::rc::Weak<T> where T: ?Sizedimpl<T> Sync for Unique<T> where T: Sync + ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for Shared<T> where T: ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for *const T where T: ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for *mut T where T: ?Sizedimpl Sync for AtomicBoolimpl<T> Sync for AtomicPtr<T>impl<T> !Sync for Cell<T>impl<T> !Sync for RefCell<T> where T: ?Sizedimpl<T> !Sync for UnsafeCell<T> where T: ?Sizedimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::slice::Iter<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl<'a, T> Sync for std::slice::IterMut<'a, T> where T: Syncimpl Sync for AtomicI8impl Sync for AtomicU8impl Sync for AtomicI16impl Sync for AtomicU16impl Sync for AtomicI32impl Sync for AtomicU32impl Sync for AtomicI64impl Sync for AtomicU64impl Sync for AtomicIsizeimpl Sync for AtomicUsizeimpl<T> !Sync for Receiver<T>impl<T> !Sync for Sender<T>impl<T> !Sync for SyncSender<T>impl<T: ?Sized + Send> Sync for Mutex<T>impl Sync for Onceimpl<T: ?Sized + Send + Sync> Sync for RwLock<T>