1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 //! Kernel types. 4 5 use crate::init::{self, PinInit}; 6 use alloc::boxed::Box; 7 use core::{ 8 cell::UnsafeCell, 9 marker::{PhantomData, PhantomPinned}, 10 mem::MaybeUninit, 11 ops::{Deref, DerefMut}, 12 ptr::NonNull, 13 }; 14 15 /// Used to transfer ownership to and from foreign (non-Rust) languages. 16 /// 17 /// Ownership is transferred from Rust to a foreign language by calling [`Self::into_foreign`] and 18 /// later may be transferred back to Rust by calling [`Self::from_foreign`]. 19 /// 20 /// This trait is meant to be used in cases when Rust objects are stored in C objects and 21 /// eventually "freed" back to Rust. 22 pub trait ForeignOwnable: Sized { 23 /// Type of values borrowed between calls to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] and 24 /// [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`]. 25 type Borrowed<'a>; 26 27 /// Converts a Rust-owned object to a foreign-owned one. 28 /// 29 /// The foreign representation is a pointer to void. 30 fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void; 31 32 /// Borrows a foreign-owned object. 33 /// 34 /// # Safety 35 /// 36 /// `ptr` must have been returned by a previous call to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] for 37 /// which a previous matching [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`] hasn't been called yet. 38 unsafe fn borrow<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self::Borrowed<'a>; 39 40 /// Converts a foreign-owned object back to a Rust-owned one. 41 /// 42 /// # Safety 43 /// 44 /// `ptr` must have been returned by a previous call to [`ForeignOwnable::into_foreign`] for 45 /// which a previous matching [`ForeignOwnable::from_foreign`] hasn't been called yet. 46 /// Additionally, all instances (if any) of values returned by [`ForeignOwnable::borrow`] for 47 /// this object must have been dropped. 48 unsafe fn from_foreign(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self; 49 } 50 51 impl<T: 'static> ForeignOwnable for Box<T> { 52 type Borrowed<'a> = &'a T; 53 54 fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void { 55 Box::into_raw(self) as _ 56 } 57 58 unsafe fn borrow<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> &'a T { 59 // SAFETY: The safety requirements for this function ensure that the object is still alive, 60 // so it is safe to dereference the raw pointer. 61 // The safety requirements of `from_foreign` also ensure that the object remains alive for 62 // the lifetime of the returned value. 63 unsafe { &*ptr.cast() } 64 } 65 66 unsafe fn from_foreign(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self { 67 // SAFETY: The safety requirements of this function ensure that `ptr` comes from a previous 68 // call to `Self::into_foreign`. 69 unsafe { Box::from_raw(ptr as _) } 70 } 71 } 72 73 impl ForeignOwnable for () { 74 type Borrowed<'a> = (); 75 76 fn into_foreign(self) -> *const core::ffi::c_void { 77 core::ptr::NonNull::dangling().as_ptr() 78 } 79 80 unsafe fn borrow<'a>(_: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self::Borrowed<'a> {} 81 82 unsafe fn from_foreign(_: *const core::ffi::c_void) -> Self {} 83 } 84 85 /// Runs a cleanup function/closure when dropped. 86 /// 87 /// The [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] function prevents the cleanup function from running. 88 /// 89 /// # Examples 90 /// 91 /// In the example below, we have multiple exit paths and we want to log regardless of which one is 92 /// taken: 93 /// ``` 94 /// # use kernel::types::ScopeGuard; 95 /// fn example1(arg: bool) { 96 /// let _log = ScopeGuard::new(|| pr_info!("example1 completed\n")); 97 /// 98 /// if arg { 99 /// return; 100 /// } 101 /// 102 /// pr_info!("Do something...\n"); 103 /// } 104 /// 105 /// # example1(false); 106 /// # example1(true); 107 /// ``` 108 /// 109 /// In the example below, we want to log the same message on all early exits but a different one on 110 /// the main exit path: 111 /// ``` 112 /// # use kernel::types::ScopeGuard; 113 /// fn example2(arg: bool) { 114 /// let log = ScopeGuard::new(|| pr_info!("example2 returned early\n")); 115 /// 116 /// if arg { 117 /// return; 118 /// } 119 /// 120 /// // (Other early returns...) 121 /// 122 /// log.dismiss(); 123 /// pr_info!("example2 no early return\n"); 124 /// } 125 /// 126 /// # example2(false); 127 /// # example2(true); 128 /// ``` 129 /// 130 /// In the example below, we need a mutable object (the vector) to be accessible within the log 131 /// function, so we wrap it in the [`ScopeGuard`]: 132 /// ``` 133 /// # use kernel::types::ScopeGuard; 134 /// fn example3(arg: bool) -> Result { 135 /// let mut vec = 136 /// ScopeGuard::new_with_data(Vec::new(), |v| pr_info!("vec had {} elements\n", v.len())); 137 /// 138 /// vec.try_push(10u8)?; 139 /// if arg { 140 /// return Ok(()); 141 /// } 142 /// vec.try_push(20u8)?; 143 /// Ok(()) 144 /// } 145 /// 146 /// # assert_eq!(example3(false), Ok(())); 147 /// # assert_eq!(example3(true), Ok(())); 148 /// ``` 149 /// 150 /// # Invariants 151 /// 152 /// The value stored in the struct is nearly always `Some(_)`, except between 153 /// [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] and [`ScopeGuard::drop`]: in this case, it will be `None` as the value 154 /// will have been returned to the caller. Since [`ScopeGuard::dismiss`] consumes the guard, 155 /// callers won't be able to use it anymore. 156 pub struct ScopeGuard<T, F: FnOnce(T)>(Option<(T, F)>); 157 158 impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> ScopeGuard<T, F> { 159 /// Creates a new guarded object wrapping the given data and with the given cleanup function. 160 pub fn new_with_data(data: T, cleanup_func: F) -> Self { 161 // INVARIANT: The struct is being initialised with `Some(_)`. 162 Self(Some((data, cleanup_func))) 163 } 164 165 /// Prevents the cleanup function from running and returns the guarded data. 166 pub fn dismiss(mut self) -> T { 167 // INVARIANT: This is the exception case in the invariant; it is not visible to callers 168 // because this function consumes `self`. 169 self.0.take().unwrap().0 170 } 171 } 172 173 impl ScopeGuard<(), fn(())> { 174 /// Creates a new guarded object with the given cleanup function. 175 pub fn new(cleanup: impl FnOnce()) -> ScopeGuard<(), impl FnOnce(())> { 176 ScopeGuard::new_with_data((), move |_| cleanup()) 177 } 178 } 179 180 impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> Deref for ScopeGuard<T, F> { 181 type Target = T; 182 183 fn deref(&self) -> &T { 184 // The type invariants guarantee that `unwrap` will succeed. 185 &self.0.as_ref().unwrap().0 186 } 187 } 188 189 impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> DerefMut for ScopeGuard<T, F> { 190 fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { 191 // The type invariants guarantee that `unwrap` will succeed. 192 &mut self.0.as_mut().unwrap().0 193 } 194 } 195 196 impl<T, F: FnOnce(T)> Drop for ScopeGuard<T, F> { 197 fn drop(&mut self) { 198 // Run the cleanup function if one is still present. 199 if let Some((data, cleanup)) = self.0.take() { 200 cleanup(data) 201 } 202 } 203 } 204 205 /// Stores an opaque value. 206 /// 207 /// This is meant to be used with FFI objects that are never interpreted by Rust code. 208 #[repr(transparent)] 209 pub struct Opaque<T> { 210 value: UnsafeCell<MaybeUninit<T>>, 211 _pin: PhantomPinned, 212 } 213 214 impl<T> Opaque<T> { 215 /// Creates a new opaque value. 216 pub const fn new(value: T) -> Self { 217 Self { 218 value: UnsafeCell::new(MaybeUninit::new(value)), 219 _pin: PhantomPinned, 220 } 221 } 222 223 /// Creates an uninitialised value. 224 pub const fn uninit() -> Self { 225 Self { 226 value: UnsafeCell::new(MaybeUninit::uninit()), 227 _pin: PhantomPinned, 228 } 229 } 230 231 /// Creates a pin-initializer from the given initializer closure. 232 /// 233 /// The returned initializer calls the given closure with the pointer to the inner `T` of this 234 /// `Opaque`. Since this memory is uninitialized, the closure is not allowed to read from it. 235 /// 236 /// This function is safe, because the `T` inside of an `Opaque` is allowed to be 237 /// uninitialized. Additionally, access to the inner `T` requires `unsafe`, so the caller needs 238 /// to verify at that point that the inner value is valid. 239 pub fn ffi_init(init_func: impl FnOnce(*mut T)) -> impl PinInit<Self> { 240 // SAFETY: We contain a `MaybeUninit`, so it is OK for the `init_func` to not fully 241 // initialize the `T`. 242 unsafe { 243 init::pin_init_from_closure::<_, ::core::convert::Infallible>(move |slot| { 244 init_func(Self::raw_get(slot)); 245 Ok(()) 246 }) 247 } 248 } 249 250 /// Returns a raw pointer to the opaque data. 251 pub const fn get(&self) -> *mut T { 252 UnsafeCell::get(&self.value).cast::<T>() 253 } 254 255 /// Gets the value behind `this`. 256 /// 257 /// This function is useful to get access to the value without creating intermediate 258 /// references. 259 pub const fn raw_get(this: *const Self) -> *mut T { 260 UnsafeCell::raw_get(this.cast::<UnsafeCell<MaybeUninit<T>>>()).cast::<T>() 261 } 262 } 263 264 /// Types that are _always_ reference counted. 265 /// 266 /// It allows such types to define their own custom ref increment and decrement functions. 267 /// Additionally, it allows users to convert from a shared reference `&T` to an owned reference 268 /// [`ARef<T>`]. 269 /// 270 /// This is usually implemented by wrappers to existing structures on the C side of the code. For 271 /// Rust code, the recommendation is to use [`Arc`](crate::sync::Arc) to create reference-counted 272 /// instances of a type. 273 /// 274 /// # Safety 275 /// 276 /// Implementers must ensure that increments to the reference count keep the object alive in memory 277 /// at least until matching decrements are performed. 278 /// 279 /// Implementers must also ensure that all instances are reference-counted. (Otherwise they 280 /// won't be able to honour the requirement that [`AlwaysRefCounted::inc_ref`] keep the object 281 /// alive.) 282 pub unsafe trait AlwaysRefCounted { 283 /// Increments the reference count on the object. 284 fn inc_ref(&self); 285 286 /// Decrements the reference count on the object. 287 /// 288 /// Frees the object when the count reaches zero. 289 /// 290 /// # Safety 291 /// 292 /// Callers must ensure that there was a previous matching increment to the reference count, 293 /// and that the object is no longer used after its reference count is decremented (as it may 294 /// result in the object being freed), unless the caller owns another increment on the refcount 295 /// (e.g., it calls [`AlwaysRefCounted::inc_ref`] twice, then calls 296 /// [`AlwaysRefCounted::dec_ref`] once). 297 unsafe fn dec_ref(obj: NonNull<Self>); 298 } 299 300 /// An owned reference to an always-reference-counted object. 301 /// 302 /// The object's reference count is automatically decremented when an instance of [`ARef`] is 303 /// dropped. It is also automatically incremented when a new instance is created via 304 /// [`ARef::clone`]. 305 /// 306 /// # Invariants 307 /// 308 /// The pointer stored in `ptr` is non-null and valid for the lifetime of the [`ARef`] instance. In 309 /// particular, the [`ARef`] instance owns an increment on the underlying object's reference count. 310 pub struct ARef<T: AlwaysRefCounted> { 311 ptr: NonNull<T>, 312 _p: PhantomData<T>, 313 } 314 315 // SAFETY: It is safe to send `ARef<T>` to another thread when the underlying `T` is `Sync` because 316 // it effectively means sharing `&T` (which is safe because `T` is `Sync`); additionally, it needs 317 // `T` to be `Send` because any thread that has an `ARef<T>` may ultimately access `T` using a 318 // mutable reference, for example, when the reference count reaches zero and `T` is dropped. 319 unsafe impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted + Sync + Send> Send for ARef<T> {} 320 321 // SAFETY: It is safe to send `&ARef<T>` to another thread when the underlying `T` is `Sync` 322 // because it effectively means sharing `&T` (which is safe because `T` is `Sync`); additionally, 323 // it needs `T` to be `Send` because any thread that has a `&ARef<T>` may clone it and get an 324 // `ARef<T>` on that thread, so the thread may ultimately access `T` using a mutable reference, for 325 // example, when the reference count reaches zero and `T` is dropped. 326 unsafe impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted + Sync + Send> Sync for ARef<T> {} 327 328 impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted> ARef<T> { 329 /// Creates a new instance of [`ARef`]. 330 /// 331 /// It takes over an increment of the reference count on the underlying object. 332 /// 333 /// # Safety 334 /// 335 /// Callers must ensure that the reference count was incremented at least once, and that they 336 /// are properly relinquishing one increment. That is, if there is only one increment, callers 337 /// must not use the underlying object anymore -- it is only safe to do so via the newly 338 /// created [`ARef`]. 339 pub unsafe fn from_raw(ptr: NonNull<T>) -> Self { 340 // INVARIANT: The safety requirements guarantee that the new instance now owns the 341 // increment on the refcount. 342 Self { 343 ptr, 344 _p: PhantomData, 345 } 346 } 347 } 348 349 impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted> Clone for ARef<T> { 350 fn clone(&self) -> Self { 351 self.inc_ref(); 352 // SAFETY: We just incremented the refcount above. 353 unsafe { Self::from_raw(self.ptr) } 354 } 355 } 356 357 impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted> Deref for ARef<T> { 358 type Target = T; 359 360 fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { 361 // SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that the object is valid. 362 unsafe { self.ptr.as_ref() } 363 } 364 } 365 366 impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted> From<&T> for ARef<T> { 367 fn from(b: &T) -> Self { 368 b.inc_ref(); 369 // SAFETY: We just incremented the refcount above. 370 unsafe { Self::from_raw(NonNull::from(b)) } 371 } 372 } 373 374 impl<T: AlwaysRefCounted> Drop for ARef<T> { 375 fn drop(&mut self) { 376 // SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that the `ARef` owns the reference we're about to 377 // decrement. 378 unsafe { T::dec_ref(self.ptr) }; 379 } 380 } 381 382 /// A sum type that always holds either a value of type `L` or `R`. 383 pub enum Either<L, R> { 384 /// Constructs an instance of [`Either`] containing a value of type `L`. 385 Left(L), 386 387 /// Constructs an instance of [`Either`] containing a value of type `R`. 388 Right(R), 389 } 390