macro_rules! pin {
($($x:ident),*) => { ... };
($(
let $x:ident = $init:expr;
)*) => { ... };
}
Expand description
Pins a value on the stack.
Calls to async fn
return anonymous Future
values that are !Unpin
.
These values must be pinned before they can be polled. Calling .await
will
handle this, but consumes the future. If it is required to call .await
on
a &mut _
reference, the caller is responsible for pinning the future.
Pinning may be done by allocating with Box::pin
or by using the stack
with the pin!
macro.
The following will fail to compile:
async fn my_async_fn() {
// async logic here
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let mut future = my_async_fn();
(&mut future).await;
}
To make this work requires pinning:
use tokio::pin;
async fn my_async_fn() {
// async logic here
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let future = my_async_fn();
pin!(future);
(&mut future).await;
}
Pinning is useful when using select!
and stream operators that require T: Stream + Unpin
.
§Usage
The pin!
macro takes identifiers as arguments. It does not work
with expressions.
The following does not compile as an expression is passed to pin!
.
async fn my_async_fn() {
// async logic here
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let mut future = pin!(my_async_fn());
(&mut future).await;
}
§Examples
Using with select:
use tokio::{pin, select};
use tokio_stream::{self as stream, StreamExt};
async fn my_async_fn() {
// async logic here
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let mut stream = stream::iter(vec![1, 2, 3, 4]);
let future = my_async_fn();
pin!(future);
loop {
select! {
_ = &mut future => {
// Stop looping `future` will be polled after completion
break;
}
Some(val) = stream.next() => {
println!("got value = {}", val);
}
}
}
}
Because assigning to a variable followed by pinning is common, there is also a variant of the macro that supports doing both in one go.
use tokio::{pin, select};
async fn my_async_fn() {
// async logic here
}
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
pin! {
let future1 = my_async_fn();
let future2 = my_async_fn();
}
select! {
_ = &mut future1 => {}
_ = &mut future2 => {}
}
}