xref: /openbmc/linux/rust/kernel/error.rs (revision 76afff43)
1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2 
3 //! Kernel errors.
4 //!
5 //! C header: [`include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h`](../../../include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h)
6 
7 use alloc::{
8     alloc::{AllocError, LayoutError},
9     collections::TryReserveError,
10 };
11 
12 use core::convert::From;
13 use core::num::TryFromIntError;
14 use core::str::Utf8Error;
15 
16 /// Contains the C-compatible error codes.
17 pub mod code {
18     macro_rules! declare_err {
19         ($err:tt $(,)? $($doc:expr),+) => {
20             $(
21             #[doc = $doc]
22             )*
23             pub const $err: super::Error = super::Error(-(crate::bindings::$err as i32));
24         };
25     }
26 
27     declare_err!(EPERM, "Operation not permitted.");
28     declare_err!(ENOENT, "No such file or directory.");
29     declare_err!(ESRCH, "No such process.");
30     declare_err!(EINTR, "Interrupted system call.");
31     declare_err!(EIO, "I/O error.");
32     declare_err!(ENXIO, "No such device or address.");
33     declare_err!(E2BIG, "Argument list too long.");
34     declare_err!(ENOEXEC, "Exec format error.");
35     declare_err!(EBADF, "Bad file number.");
36     declare_err!(ECHILD, "Exec format error.");
37     declare_err!(EAGAIN, "Try again.");
38     declare_err!(ENOMEM, "Out of memory.");
39     declare_err!(EACCES, "Permission denied.");
40     declare_err!(EFAULT, "Bad address.");
41     declare_err!(ENOTBLK, "Block device required.");
42     declare_err!(EBUSY, "Device or resource busy.");
43     declare_err!(EEXIST, "File exists.");
44     declare_err!(EXDEV, "Cross-device link.");
45     declare_err!(ENODEV, "No such device.");
46     declare_err!(ENOTDIR, "Not a directory.");
47     declare_err!(EISDIR, "Is a directory.");
48     declare_err!(EINVAL, "Invalid argument.");
49     declare_err!(ENFILE, "File table overflow.");
50     declare_err!(EMFILE, "Too many open files.");
51     declare_err!(ENOTTY, "Not a typewriter.");
52     declare_err!(ETXTBSY, "Text file busy.");
53     declare_err!(EFBIG, "File too large.");
54     declare_err!(ENOSPC, "No space left on device.");
55     declare_err!(ESPIPE, "Illegal seek.");
56     declare_err!(EROFS, "Read-only file system.");
57     declare_err!(EMLINK, "Too many links.");
58     declare_err!(EPIPE, "Broken pipe.");
59     declare_err!(EDOM, "Math argument out of domain of func.");
60     declare_err!(ERANGE, "Math result not representable.");
61 }
62 
63 /// Generic integer kernel error.
64 ///
65 /// The kernel defines a set of integer generic error codes based on C and
66 /// POSIX ones. These codes may have a more specific meaning in some contexts.
67 ///
68 /// # Invariants
69 ///
70 /// The value is a valid `errno` (i.e. `>= -MAX_ERRNO && < 0`).
71 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
72 pub struct Error(core::ffi::c_int);
73 
74 impl Error {
75     /// Returns the kernel error code.
76     pub fn to_kernel_errno(self) -> core::ffi::c_int {
77         self.0
78     }
79 }
80 
81 impl From<AllocError> for Error {
82     fn from(_: AllocError) -> Error {
83         code::ENOMEM
84     }
85 }
86 
87 impl From<TryFromIntError> for Error {
88     fn from(_: TryFromIntError) -> Error {
89         code::EINVAL
90     }
91 }
92 
93 impl From<Utf8Error> for Error {
94     fn from(_: Utf8Error) -> Error {
95         code::EINVAL
96     }
97 }
98 
99 impl From<TryReserveError> for Error {
100     fn from(_: TryReserveError) -> Error {
101         code::ENOMEM
102     }
103 }
104 
105 impl From<LayoutError> for Error {
106     fn from(_: LayoutError) -> Error {
107         code::ENOMEM
108     }
109 }
110 
111 impl From<core::fmt::Error> for Error {
112     fn from(_: core::fmt::Error) -> Error {
113         code::EINVAL
114     }
115 }
116 
117 impl From<core::convert::Infallible> for Error {
118     fn from(e: core::convert::Infallible) -> Error {
119         match e {}
120     }
121 }
122 
123 /// A [`Result`] with an [`Error`] error type.
124 ///
125 /// To be used as the return type for functions that may fail.
126 ///
127 /// # Error codes in C and Rust
128 ///
129 /// In C, it is common that functions indicate success or failure through
130 /// their return value; modifying or returning extra data through non-`const`
131 /// pointer parameters. In particular, in the kernel, functions that may fail
132 /// typically return an `int` that represents a generic error code. We model
133 /// those as [`Error`].
134 ///
135 /// In Rust, it is idiomatic to model functions that may fail as returning
136 /// a [`Result`]. Since in the kernel many functions return an error code,
137 /// [`Result`] is a type alias for a [`core::result::Result`] that uses
138 /// [`Error`] as its error type.
139 ///
140 /// Note that even if a function does not return anything when it succeeds,
141 /// it should still be modeled as returning a `Result` rather than
142 /// just an [`Error`].
143 pub type Result<T = ()> = core::result::Result<T, Error>;
144