diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'rust/kernel')
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/lib.rs | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/print.rs | 29 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/sync.rs | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs | 524 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/types.rs | 215 |
6 files changed, 779 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/rust/kernel/lib.rs b/rust/kernel/lib.rs index 53040fa9e897..223564f9f0cc 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/lib.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/lib.rs @@ -13,7 +13,12 @@ #![no_std] #![feature(allocator_api)] +#![feature(coerce_unsized)] #![feature(core_ffi_c)] +#![feature(dispatch_from_dyn)] +#![feature(generic_associated_types)] +#![feature(receiver_trait)] +#![feature(unsize)] // Ensure conditional compilation based on the kernel configuration works; // otherwise we may silently break things like initcall handling. @@ -31,6 +36,7 @@ mod static_assert; #[doc(hidden)] pub mod std_vendor; pub mod str; +pub mod sync; pub mod types; #[doc(hidden)] diff --git a/rust/kernel/prelude.rs b/rust/kernel/prelude.rs index 7a90249ee9b9..0bc1c97e5604 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/prelude.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/prelude.rs @@ -11,15 +11,21 @@ //! use kernel::prelude::*; //! ``` +#[doc(no_inline)] pub use core::pin::Pin; +#[doc(no_inline)] pub use alloc::{boxed::Box, vec::Vec}; +#[doc(no_inline)] pub use macros::{module, vtable}; pub use super::build_assert; -pub use super::{dbg, pr_alert, pr_crit, pr_debug, pr_emerg, pr_err, pr_info, pr_notice, pr_warn}; +// `super::std_vendor` is hidden, which makes the macro inline for some reason. +#[doc(no_inline)] +pub use super::dbg; +pub use super::{pr_alert, pr_crit, pr_debug, pr_emerg, pr_err, pr_info, pr_notice, pr_warn}; pub use super::static_assert; diff --git a/rust/kernel/print.rs b/rust/kernel/print.rs index 29bf9c2e8aee..30103325696d 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/print.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/print.rs @@ -142,17 +142,24 @@ pub fn call_printk_cont(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) { macro_rules! print_macro ( // The non-continuation cases (most of them, e.g. `INFO`). ($format_string:path, false, $($arg:tt)+) => ( - // SAFETY: This hidden macro should only be called by the documented - // printing macros which ensure the format string is one of the fixed - // ones. All `__LOG_PREFIX`s are null-terminated as they are generated - // by the `module!` proc macro or fixed values defined in a kernel - // crate. - unsafe { - $crate::print::call_printk( - &$format_string, - crate::__LOG_PREFIX, - format_args!($($arg)+), - ); + // To remain sound, `arg`s must be expanded outside the `unsafe` block. + // Typically one would use a `let` binding for that; however, `format_args!` + // takes borrows on the arguments, but does not extend the scope of temporaries. + // Therefore, a `match` expression is used to keep them around, since + // the scrutinee is kept until the end of the `match`. + match format_args!($($arg)+) { + // SAFETY: This hidden macro should only be called by the documented + // printing macros which ensure the format string is one of the fixed + // ones. All `__LOG_PREFIX`s are null-terminated as they are generated + // by the `module!` proc macro or fixed values defined in a kernel + // crate. + args => unsafe { + $crate::print::call_printk( + &$format_string, + crate::__LOG_PREFIX, + args, + ); + } } ); diff --git a/rust/kernel/sync.rs b/rust/kernel/sync.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..33da23e3076d --- /dev/null +++ b/rust/kernel/sync.rs @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +//! Synchronisation primitives. +//! +//! This module contains the kernel APIs related to synchronisation that have been ported or +//! wrapped for usage by Rust code in the kernel. + +mod arc; + +pub use arc::{Arc, ArcBorrow, UniqueArc}; diff --git a/rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs b/rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f2f1c83d72ba --- /dev/null +++ b/rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs @@ -0,0 +1,524 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +//! A reference-counted pointer. +//! +//! This module implements a way for users to create reference-counted objects and pointers to +//! them. Such a pointer automatically increments and decrements the count, and drops the +//! underlying object when it reaches zero. It is also safe to use concurrently from multiple +//! threads. +//! +//! It is different from the standard library's [`Arc`] in a few ways: +//! 1. It is backed by the kernel's `refcount_t` type. +//! 2. It does not support weak references, which allows it to be half the size. +//! 3. It saturates the reference count instead of aborting when it goes over a threshold. +//! 4. It does not provide a `get_mut` method, so the ref counted object is pinned. +//! +//! [`Arc`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Arc.html + +use crate::{ + bindings, + error::Result, + types::{ForeignOwnable, Opaque}, +}; +use alloc::boxed::Box; +use core::{ + marker::{PhantomData, Unsize}, + mem::{ManuallyDrop, MaybeUninit}, + ops::{Deref, DerefMut}, + pin::Pin, + ptr::NonNull, +}; + +/// A reference-counted pointer to an instance of `T`. +/// +/// The reference count is incremented when new instances of [`Arc`] are created, and decremented +/// when they are dropped. When the count reaches zero, the underlying `T` is also dropped. +/// +/// # Invariants +/// +/// The reference count on an instance of [`Arc`] is always non-zero. +/// The object pointed to by [`Arc`] is always pinned. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::Arc; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// // Create a ref-counted instance of `Example`. +/// let obj = Arc::try_new(Example { a: 10, b: 20 })?; +/// +/// // Get a new pointer to `obj` and increment the refcount. +/// let cloned = obj.clone(); +/// +/// // Assert that both `obj` and `cloned` point to the same underlying object. +/// assert!(core::ptr::eq(&*obj, &*cloned)); +/// +/// // Destroy `obj` and decrement its refcount. +/// drop(obj); +/// +/// // Check that the values are still accessible through `cloned`. +/// assert_eq!(cloned.a, 10); +/// assert_eq!(cloned.b, 20); +/// +/// // The refcount drops to zero when `cloned` goes out of scope, and the memory is freed. +/// ``` +/// +/// Using `Arc<T>` as the type of `self`: +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::Arc; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// impl Example { +/// fn take_over(self: Arc<Self>) { +/// // ... +/// } +/// +/// fn use_reference(self: &Arc<Self>) { +/// // ... +/// } +/// } +/// +/// let obj = Arc::try_new(Example { a: 10, b: 20 })?; +/// obj.use_reference(); +/// obj.take_over(); +/// ``` +/// +/// Coercion from `Arc<Example>` to `Arc<dyn MyTrait>`: +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::{Arc, ArcBorrow}; +/// +/// trait MyTrait { +/// // Trait has a function whose `self` type is `Arc<Self>`. +/// fn example1(self: Arc<Self>) {} +/// +/// // Trait has a function whose `self` type is `ArcBorrow<'_, Self>`. +/// fn example2(self: ArcBorrow<'_, Self>) {} +/// } +/// +/// struct Example; +/// impl MyTrait for Example {} +/// +/// // `obj` has type `Arc<Example>`. +/// let obj: Arc<Example> = Arc::try_new(Example)?; +/// +/// // `coerced` has type `Arc<dyn MyTrait>`. +/// let coerced: Arc<dyn MyTrait> = obj; +/// ``` +pub struct Arc<T: ?Sized> { + ptr: NonNull<ArcInner<T>>, + _p: PhantomData<ArcInner<T>>, +} + +#[repr(C)] +struct ArcInner<T: ?Sized> { + refcount: Opaque<bindings::refcount_t>, + data: T, +} + +// This is to allow [`Arc`] (and variants) to be used as the type of `self`. +impl<T: ?Sized> core::ops::Receiver for Arc<T> {} + +// This is to allow coercion from `Arc<T>` to `Arc<U>` if `T` can be converted to the +// dynamically-sized type (DST) `U`. +impl<T: ?Sized + Unsize<U>, U: ?Sized> core::ops::CoerceUnsized<Arc<U>> for Arc<T> {} + +// This is to allow `Arc<U>` to be dispatched on when `Arc<T>` can be coerced into `Arc<U>`. +impl<T: ?Sized + Unsize<U>, U: ?Sized> core::ops::DispatchFromDyn<Arc<U>> for Arc<T> {} + +// SAFETY: It is safe to send `Arc<T>` to another thread when the underlying `T` is `Sync` because +// it effectively means sharing `&T` (which is safe because `T` is `Sync`); additionally, it needs +// `T` to be `Send` because any thread that has an `Arc<T>` may ultimately access `T` directly, for +// example, when the reference count reaches zero and `T` is dropped. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized + Sync + Send> Send for Arc<T> {} + +// SAFETY: It is safe to send `&Arc<T>` to another thread when the underlying `T` is `Sync` for the +// same reason as above. `T` needs to be `Send` as well because a thread can clone an `&Arc<T>` +// into an `Arc<T>`, which may lead to `T` being accessed by the same reasoning as above. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized + Sync + Send> Sync for Arc<T> {} + +impl<T> Arc<T> { + /// Constructs a new reference counted instance of `T`. + pub fn try_new(contents: T) -> Result<Self> { + // INVARIANT: The refcount is initialised to a non-zero value. + let value = ArcInner { + // SAFETY: There are no safety requirements for this FFI call. + refcount: Opaque::new(unsafe { bindings::REFCOUNT_INIT(1) }), + data: contents, + }; + + let inner = Box::try_new(value)?; + + // SAFETY: We just created `inner` with a reference count of 1, which is owned by the new + // `Arc` object. + Ok(unsafe { Self::from_inner(Box::leak(inner).into()) }) + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Arc<T> { + /// Constructs a new [`Arc`] from an existing [`ArcInner`]. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The caller must ensure that `inner` points to a valid location and has a non-zero reference + /// count, one of which will be owned by the new [`Arc`] instance. + unsafe fn from_inner(inner: NonNull<ArcInner<T>>) -> Self { + // INVARIANT: By the safety requirements, the invariants hold. + Arc { + ptr: inner, + _p: PhantomData, + } + } + + /// Returns an [`ArcBorrow`] from the given [`Arc`]. + /// + /// This is useful when the argument of a function call is an [`ArcBorrow`] (e.g., in a method + /// receiver), but we have an [`Arc`] instead. Getting an [`ArcBorrow`] is free when optimised. + #[inline] + pub fn as_arc_borrow(&self) -> ArcBorrow<'_, T> { + // SAFETY: The constraint that the lifetime of the shared reference must outlive that of + // the returned `ArcBorrow` ensures that the object remains alive and that no mutable + // reference can be created. + unsafe { ArcBorrow::new(self.ptr) } + } +} + +impl<T: 'static> ForeignOwnable for Arc<T> { + type Borrowed<'a> = ArcBorrow<'a, T>; + + fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void { + ManuallyDrop::new(self).ptr.as_ptr() as _ + } + + unsafe fn borrow<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> ArcBorrow<'a, T> { + // SAFETY: By the safety requirement of this function, we know that `ptr` came from + // a previous call to `Arc::into_foreign`. + let inner = NonNull::new(ptr as *mut ArcInner<T>).unwrap(); + + // SAFETY: The safety requirements of `from_foreign` ensure that the object remains alive + // for the lifetime of the returned value. Additionally, the safety requirements of + // `ForeignOwnable::borrow_mut` ensure that no new mutable references are created. + unsafe { ArcBorrow::new(inner) } + } + + unsafe fn from_foreign(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self { + // SAFETY: By the safety requirement of this function, we know that `ptr` came from + // a previous call to `Arc::into_foreign`, which guarantees that `ptr` is valid and + // holds a reference count increment that is transferrable to us. + unsafe { Self::from_inner(NonNull::new(ptr as _).unwrap()) } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for Arc<T> { + type Target = T; + + fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, there is necessarily a reference to the object, so it is + // safe to dereference it. + unsafe { &self.ptr.as_ref().data } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Clone for Arc<T> { + fn clone(&self) -> Self { + // INVARIANT: C `refcount_inc` saturates the refcount, so it cannot overflow to zero. + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, there is necessarily a reference to the object, so it is + // safe to increment the refcount. + unsafe { bindings::refcount_inc(self.ptr.as_ref().refcount.get()) }; + + // SAFETY: We just incremented the refcount. This increment is now owned by the new `Arc`. + unsafe { Self::from_inner(self.ptr) } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Drop for Arc<T> { + fn drop(&mut self) { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, there is necessarily a reference to the object. We cannot + // touch `refcount` after it's decremented to a non-zero value because another thread/CPU + // may concurrently decrement it to zero and free it. It is ok to have a raw pointer to + // freed/invalid memory as long as it is never dereferenced. + let refcount = unsafe { self.ptr.as_ref() }.refcount.get(); + + // INVARIANT: If the refcount reaches zero, there are no other instances of `Arc`, and + // this instance is being dropped, so the broken invariant is not observable. + // SAFETY: Also by the type invariant, we are allowed to decrement the refcount. + let is_zero = unsafe { bindings::refcount_dec_and_test(refcount) }; + if is_zero { + // The count reached zero, we must free the memory. + // + // SAFETY: The pointer was initialised from the result of `Box::leak`. + unsafe { Box::from_raw(self.ptr.as_ptr()) }; + } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> From<UniqueArc<T>> for Arc<T> { + fn from(item: UniqueArc<T>) -> Self { + item.inner + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> From<Pin<UniqueArc<T>>> for Arc<T> { + fn from(item: Pin<UniqueArc<T>>) -> Self { + // SAFETY: The type invariants of `Arc` guarantee that the data is pinned. + unsafe { Pin::into_inner_unchecked(item).inner } + } +} + +/// A borrowed reference to an [`Arc`] instance. +/// +/// For cases when one doesn't ever need to increment the refcount on the allocation, it is simpler +/// to use just `&T`, which we can trivially get from an `Arc<T>` instance. +/// +/// However, when one may need to increment the refcount, it is preferable to use an `ArcBorrow<T>` +/// over `&Arc<T>` because the latter results in a double-indirection: a pointer (shared reference) +/// to a pointer (`Arc<T>`) to the object (`T`). An [`ArcBorrow`] eliminates this double +/// indirection while still allowing one to increment the refcount and getting an `Arc<T>` when/if +/// needed. +/// +/// # Invariants +/// +/// There are no mutable references to the underlying [`Arc`], and it remains valid for the +/// lifetime of the [`ArcBorrow`] instance. +/// +/// # Example +/// +/// ``` +/// use crate::sync::{Arc, ArcBorrow}; +/// +/// struct Example; +/// +/// fn do_something(e: ArcBorrow<'_, Example>) -> Arc<Example> { +/// e.into() +/// } +/// +/// let obj = Arc::try_new(Example)?; +/// let cloned = do_something(obj.as_arc_borrow()); +/// +/// // Assert that both `obj` and `cloned` point to the same underlying object. +/// assert!(core::ptr::eq(&*obj, &*cloned)); +/// ``` +/// +/// Using `ArcBorrow<T>` as the type of `self`: +/// +/// ``` +/// use crate::sync::{Arc, ArcBorrow}; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// impl Example { +/// fn use_reference(self: ArcBorrow<'_, Self>) { +/// // ... +/// } +/// } +/// +/// let obj = Arc::try_new(Example { a: 10, b: 20 })?; +/// obj.as_arc_borrow().use_reference(); +/// ``` +pub struct ArcBorrow<'a, T: ?Sized + 'a> { + inner: NonNull<ArcInner<T>>, + _p: PhantomData<&'a ()>, +} + +// This is to allow [`ArcBorrow`] (and variants) to be used as the type of `self`. +impl<T: ?Sized> core::ops::Receiver for ArcBorrow<'_, T> {} + +// This is to allow `ArcBorrow<U>` to be dispatched on when `ArcBorrow<T>` can be coerced into +// `ArcBorrow<U>`. +impl<T: ?Sized + Unsize<U>, U: ?Sized> core::ops::DispatchFromDyn<ArcBorrow<'_, U>> + for ArcBorrow<'_, T> +{ +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Clone for ArcBorrow<'_, T> { + fn clone(&self) -> Self { + *self + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Copy for ArcBorrow<'_, T> {} + +impl<T: ?Sized> ArcBorrow<'_, T> { + /// Creates a new [`ArcBorrow`] instance. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// Callers must ensure the following for the lifetime of the returned [`ArcBorrow`] instance: + /// 1. That `inner` remains valid; + /// 2. That no mutable references to `inner` are created. + unsafe fn new(inner: NonNull<ArcInner<T>>) -> Self { + // INVARIANT: The safety requirements guarantee the invariants. + Self { + inner, + _p: PhantomData, + } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> From<ArcBorrow<'_, T>> for Arc<T> { + fn from(b: ArcBorrow<'_, T>) -> Self { + // SAFETY: The existence of `b` guarantees that the refcount is non-zero. `ManuallyDrop` + // guarantees that `drop` isn't called, so it's ok that the temporary `Arc` doesn't own the + // increment. + ManuallyDrop::new(unsafe { Arc::from_inner(b.inner) }) + .deref() + .clone() + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for ArcBorrow<'_, T> { + type Target = T; + + fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, the underlying object is still alive with no mutable + // references to it, so it is safe to create a shared reference. + unsafe { &self.inner.as_ref().data } + } +} + +/// A refcounted object that is known to have a refcount of 1. +/// +/// It is mutable and can be converted to an [`Arc`] so that it can be shared. +/// +/// # Invariants +/// +/// `inner` always has a reference count of 1. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// In the following example, we make changes to the inner object before turning it into an +/// `Arc<Test>` object (after which point, it cannot be mutated directly). Note that `x.into()` +/// cannot fail. +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::{Arc, UniqueArc}; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// fn test() -> Result<Arc<Example>> { +/// let mut x = UniqueArc::try_new(Example { a: 10, b: 20 })?; +/// x.a += 1; +/// x.b += 1; +/// Ok(x.into()) +/// } +/// +/// # test().unwrap(); +/// ``` +/// +/// In the following example we first allocate memory for a ref-counted `Example` but we don't +/// initialise it on allocation. We do initialise it later with a call to [`UniqueArc::write`], +/// followed by a conversion to `Arc<Example>`. This is particularly useful when allocation happens +/// in one context (e.g., sleepable) and initialisation in another (e.g., atomic): +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::{Arc, UniqueArc}; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// fn test() -> Result<Arc<Example>> { +/// let x = UniqueArc::try_new_uninit()?; +/// Ok(x.write(Example { a: 10, b: 20 }).into()) +/// } +/// +/// # test().unwrap(); +/// ``` +/// +/// In the last example below, the caller gets a pinned instance of `Example` while converting to +/// `Arc<Example>`; this is useful in scenarios where one needs a pinned reference during +/// initialisation, for example, when initialising fields that are wrapped in locks. +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::{Arc, UniqueArc}; +/// +/// struct Example { +/// a: u32, +/// b: u32, +/// } +/// +/// fn test() -> Result<Arc<Example>> { +/// let mut pinned = Pin::from(UniqueArc::try_new(Example { a: 10, b: 20 })?); +/// // We can modify `pinned` because it is `Unpin`. +/// pinned.as_mut().a += 1; +/// Ok(pinned.into()) +/// } +/// +/// # test().unwrap(); +/// ``` +pub struct UniqueArc<T: ?Sized> { + inner: Arc<T>, +} + +impl<T> UniqueArc<T> { + /// Tries to allocate a new [`UniqueArc`] instance. + pub fn try_new(value: T) -> Result<Self> { + Ok(Self { + // INVARIANT: The newly-created object has a ref-count of 1. + inner: Arc::try_new(value)?, + }) + } + + /// Tries to allocate a new [`UniqueArc`] instance whose contents are not initialised yet. + pub fn try_new_uninit() -> Result<UniqueArc<MaybeUninit<T>>> { + Ok(UniqueArc::<MaybeUninit<T>> { + // INVARIANT: The newly-created object has a ref-count of 1. + inner: Arc::try_new(MaybeUninit::uninit())?, + }) + } +} + +impl<T> UniqueArc<MaybeUninit<T>> { + /// Converts a `UniqueArc<MaybeUninit<T>>` into a `UniqueArc<T>` by writing a value into it. + pub fn write(mut self, value: T) -> UniqueArc<T> { + self.deref_mut().write(value); + let inner = ManuallyDrop::new(self).inner.ptr; + UniqueArc { + // SAFETY: The new `Arc` is taking over `ptr` from `self.inner` (which won't be + // dropped). The types are compatible because `MaybeUninit<T>` is compatible with `T`. + inner: unsafe { Arc::from_inner(inner.cast()) }, + } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> From<UniqueArc<T>> for Pin<UniqueArc<T>> { + fn from(obj: UniqueArc<T>) -> Self { + // SAFETY: It is not possible to move/replace `T` inside a `Pin<UniqueArc<T>>` (unless `T` + // is `Unpin`), so it is ok to convert it to `Pin<UniqueArc<T>>`. + unsafe { Pin::new_unchecked(obj) } + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> Deref for UniqueArc<T> { + type Target = T; + + fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { + self.inner.deref() + } +} + +impl<T: ?Sized> DerefMut for UniqueArc<T> { + fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target { + // SAFETY: By the `Arc` type invariant, there is necessarily a reference to the object, so + // it is safe to dereference it. Additionally, we know there is only one reference when + // it's inside a `UniqueArc`, so it is safe to get a mutable reference. + unsafe { &mut self.inner.ptr.as_mut().data } + } +} diff --git a/rust/kernel/types.rs b/rust/kernel/types.rs index e84e51ec9716..9d0fdbc55843 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/types.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/types.rs @@ -2,7 +2,220 @@ //! Kernel types. -use core::{cell::UnsafeCell, mem::MaybeUninit}; +use alloc::boxed::Box; +use core::{ + cell::UnsafeCell, + mem::MaybeUninit, + ops::{Deref, DerefMut}, +}; + +/// Used to transfer ownership to and from foreign (non-Rust) languages. +/// +/// Ownership is transferred from Rust to a foreign language by calling [`Self::into_foreign`] and +/// later may be transferred back to Rust by calling [`Self::from_foreign`]. +/// +/// This trait is meant to be used in cases when Rust objects are stored in C objects and +/// eventually "freed" back to Rust. +pub trait ForeignOwnable: Sized { + /// Type of values borrowed between calls to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] and + /// [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`]. + type Borrowed<'a>; + + /// Converts a Rust-owned object to a foreign-owned one. + /// + /// The foreign representation is a pointer to void. + fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void; + + /// Borrows a foreign-owned object. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// `ptr` must have been returned by a previous call to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] for + /// which a previous matching [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`] hasn't been called yet. + /// Additionally, all instances (if any) of values returned by [`ForeignOwnable::borrow_mut`] + /// for this object must have been dropped. + unsafe fn borrow<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self::Borrowed<'a>; + + /// Mutably borrows a foreign-owned object. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// `ptr` must have been returned by a previous call to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] for + /// which a previous matching [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`] hasn't been called yet. + /// Additionally, all instances (if any) of values returned by [`ForeignOwnable::borrow`] and + /// [`ForeignOwnable::borrow_mut`] for this object must have been dropped. + unsafe fn borrow_mut(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> ScopeGuard<Self, fn(Self)> { + // SAFETY: The safety requirements ensure that `ptr` came from a previous call to + // `into_foreign`. + ScopeGuard::new_with_data(unsafe { Self::from_foreign(ptr) }, |d| { + d.into_foreign(); + }) + } + + /// Converts a foreign-owned object back to a Rust-owned one. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// `ptr` must have been returned by a previous call to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] for + /// which a previous matching [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`] hasn't been called yet. + /// Additionally, all instances (if any) of values returned by [`ForeignOwnable::borrow`] and + /// [`ForeignOwnable::borrow_mut`] for this object must have been dropped. + unsafe fn from_foreign(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self; +} + +impl<T: 'static> ForeignOwnable for Box<T> { + type Borrowed<'a> = &'a T; + + fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void { + Box::into_raw(self) as _ + } + + unsafe fn borrow<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> &'a T { + // SAFETY: The safety requirements for this function ensure that the object is still alive, + // so it is safe to dereference the raw pointer. + // The safety requirements of `from_foreign` also ensure that the object remains alive for + // the lifetime of the returned value. + unsafe { &*ptr.cast() } + } + + unsafe fn from_foreign(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self { + // SAFETY: The safety requirements of this function ensure that `ptr` comes from a previous + // call to `Self::into_foreign`. + unsafe { Box::from_raw(ptr as _) } + } +} + +impl ForeignOwnable for () { + type Borrowed<'a> = (); + + fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void { + core::ptr::NonNull::dangling().as_ptr() + } + + unsafe fn borrow<'a>(_: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self::Borrowed<'a> {} + + unsafe fn from_foreign(_: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self {} +} + +/// Runs a cleanup function/closure when dropped. +/// +/// The [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] function prevents the cleanup function from running. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// In the example below, we have multiple exit paths and we want to log regardless of which one is +/// taken: +/// ``` +/// # use kernel::ScopeGuard; +/// fn example1(arg: bool) { +/// let _log = ScopeGuard::new(|| pr_info!("example1 completed\n")); +/// +/// if arg { +/// return; +/// } +/// +/// pr_info!("Do something...\n"); +/// } +/// +/// # example1(false); +/// # example1(true); +/// ``` +/// +/// In the example below, we want to log the same message on all early exits but a different one on +/// the main exit path: +/// ``` +/// # use kernel::ScopeGuard; +/// fn example2(arg: bool) { +/// let log = ScopeGuard::new(|| pr_info!("example2 returned early\n")); +/// +/// if arg { +/// return; +/// } +/// +/// // (Other early returns...) +/// +/// log.dismiss(); +/// pr_info!("example2 no early return\n"); +/// } +/// +/// # example2(false); +/// # example2(true); +/// ``` +/// +/// In the example below, we need a mutable object (the vector) to be accessible within the log +/// function, so we wrap it in the [`ScopeGuard`]: +/// ``` +/// # use kernel::ScopeGuard; +/// fn example3(arg: bool) -> Result { +/// let mut vec = +/// ScopeGuard::new_with_data(Vec::new(), |v| pr_info!("vec had {} elements\n", v.len())); +/// +/// vec.try_push(10u8)?; +/// if arg { +/// return Ok(()); +/// } +/// vec.try_push(20u8)?; +/// Ok(()) +/// } +/// +/// # assert_eq!(example3(false), Ok(())); +/// # assert_eq!(example3(true), Ok(())); +/// ``` +/// +/// # Invariants +/// +/// The value stored in the struct is nearly always `Some(_)`, except between +/// [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] and [`ScopeGuard::drop`]: in this case, it will be `None` as the value +/// will have been returned to the caller. Since [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] consumes the guard, +/// callers won't be able to use it anymore. +pub struct ScopeGuard<T, F: FnOnce(T)>(Option<(T, F)>); + +impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> ScopeGuard<T, F> { + /// Creates a new guarded object wrapping the given data and with the given cleanup function. + pub fn new_with_data(data: T, cleanup_func: F) -> Self { + // INVARIANT: The struct is being initialised with `Some(_)`. + Self(Some((data, cleanup_func))) + } + + /// Prevents the cleanup function from running and returns the guarded data. + pub fn dismiss(mut self) -> T { + // INVARIANT: This is the exception case in the invariant; it is not visible to callers + // because this function consumes `self`. + self.0.take().unwrap().0 + } +} + +impl ScopeGuard<(), fn(())> { + /// Creates a new guarded object with the given cleanup function. + pub fn new(cleanup: impl FnOnce()) -> ScopeGuard<(), impl FnOnce(())> { + ScopeGuard::new_with_data((), move |_| cleanup()) + } +} + +impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> Deref for ScopeGuard<T, F> { + type Target = T; + + fn deref(&self) -> &T { + // The type invariants guarantee that `unwrap` will succeed. + &self.0.as_ref().unwrap().0 + } +} + +impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> DerefMut for ScopeGuard<T, F> { + fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { + // The type invariants guarantee that `unwrap` will succeed. + &mut self.0.as_mut().unwrap().0 + } +} + +impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> Drop for ScopeGuard<T, F> { + fn drop(&mut self) { + // Run the cleanup function if one is still present. + if let Some((data, cleanup)) = self.0.take() { + cleanup(data) + } + } +} /// Stores an opaque value. /// |