When a type also implements `Sync`, the meaning of `Send` is just "this
type may be accessed mutably from threads other than the one it is
created on". That's ok for this type.
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@xxxxxxxxxx>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Hindborg <a.hindborg@xxxxxxxxxxx>
---
[...]
-// SAFETY: It's OK to access `Task` through references from other threads because we're either
-// accessing properties that don't change (e.g., `pid`, `group_leader`) or that are properly
+// SAFETY: By design, the only way to access a `Task` is via the `current` function or via an
+// `ARef<Task>` obtained through the `AlwaysRefCounted` impl. This means that the only situation in
+// which a `Task` can be accessed mutably is when the refcount drops to zero and the destructor
+// runs. It is safe for that to happen on any thread, so it is ok for this type to be `Send`.
+unsafe impl Send for Task {}
+
+// SAFETY: It's OK to access `Task` through shared references from other threads because we're
+// either accessing properties that don't change (e.g., `pid`, `group_leader`) or that are properly
// synchronised by C code (e.g., `signal_pending`).
unsafe impl Sync for Task {}