diff --git a/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs b/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs index cfffe351a87d9..3fd617559033f 100644 --- a/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs +++ b/library/core/src/ptr/mod.rs @@ -581,12 +581,21 @@ pub const fn invalid_mut(addr: usize) -> *mut T { /// Convert an address back to a pointer, picking up a previously 'exposed' provenance. /// /// This is equivalent to `addr as *const T`. The provenance of the returned pointer is that of *any* -/// pointer that was previously passed to [`expose_addr`][pointer::expose_addr] or a `ptr as usize` -/// cast. If there is no previously 'exposed' provenance that justifies the way this pointer will be -/// used, the program has undefined behavior. Note that there is no algorithm that decides which -/// provenance will be used. You can think of this as "guessing" the right provenance, and the guess -/// will be "maximally in your favor", in the sense that if there is any way to avoid undefined -/// behavior, then that is the guess that will be taken. +/// pointer that was previously exposed by passing it to [`expose_addr`][pointer::expose_addr], +/// or a `ptr as usize` cast. In addition, memory which is outside the control of the Rust abstract +/// machine (MMIO registers, for example) is always considered to be exposed, so long as this memory +/// is disjoint from memory that will be used by the abstract machine such as the stack, heap, +/// and statics. +/// +/// If there is no 'exposed' provenance that justifies the way this pointer will be used, +/// the program has undefined behavior. In particular, the aliasing rules still apply: pointers +/// and references that have been invalidated due to aliasing accesses cannot be used any more, +/// even if they have been exposed! +/// +/// Note that there is no algorithm that decides which provenance will be used. You can think of this +/// as "guessing" the right provenance, and the guess will be "maximally in your favor", in the sense +/// that if there is any way to avoid undefined behavior (while upholding all aliasing requirements), +/// then that is the guess that will be taken. /// /// On platforms with multiple address spaces, it is your responsibility to ensure that the /// address makes sense in the address space that this pointer will be used with.