`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
`core::CStr` behaves generally the same as the removed implementation, with the following differences:
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`). - It does not provide `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut` method. - It was used only in `DerefMut` implementation for `CString`. This change replaces it with a manual cast to `&mut CStr`. - Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified. - It has `as_ptr()` method instead of `as_char_ptr()`, which also returns `*const c_char`.
Rust also introduces C literals (`c""`), so the `c_str` macro is removed here as well.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com --- rust/kernel/error.rs | 7 +- rust/kernel/init.rs | 8 +- rust/kernel/kunit.rs | 16 +- rust/kernel/net/phy.rs | 2 +- rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 4 +- rust/kernel/str.rs | 490 +----------------------------------- rust/kernel/sync.rs | 13 +- rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs | 5 +- rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs | 6 +- rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 10 +- scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs | 4 +- 11 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 508 deletions(-)
diff --git a/rust/kernel/error.rs b/rust/kernel/error.rs index 55280ae9fe40..18808b29604d 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/error.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/error.rs @@ -4,10 +4,11 @@ //! //! C header: [`include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h`](srctree/include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h)
-use crate::{alloc::AllocError, str::CStr}; +use crate::alloc::AllocError;
use alloc::alloc::LayoutError;
+use core::ffi::CStr; use core::fmt; use core::num::TryFromIntError; use core::str::Utf8Error; @@ -142,7 +143,7 @@ pub fn name(&self) -> Option<&'static CStr> { None } else { // SAFETY: The string returned by `errname` is static and `NUL`-terminated. - Some(unsafe { CStr::from_char_ptr(ptr) }) + Some(unsafe { CStr::from_ptr(ptr) }) } }
@@ -164,7 +165,7 @@ fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { None => f.debug_tuple("Error").field(&-self.0).finish(), // SAFETY: These strings are ASCII-only. Some(name) => f - .debug_tuple(unsafe { core::str::from_utf8_unchecked(name) }) + .debug_tuple(unsafe { core::str::from_utf8_unchecked(name.to_bytes()) }) .finish(), } } diff --git a/rust/kernel/init.rs b/rust/kernel/init.rs index 68605b633e73..af0017e56c0e 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/init.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/init.rs @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ //! } //! //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"), //! b: 24, //! }); //! ``` @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ //! # b: u32, //! # } //! # let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! # a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! # a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"), //! # b: 24, //! # }); //! let foo: Result<Pin<Box<Foo>>> = Box::pin_init(foo, GFP_KERNEL); @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ //! ```rust //! # use kernel::sync::{new_mutex, Arc, Mutex}; //! let mtx: Result<Arc<Mutex<usize>>> = -//! Arc::pin_init(new_mutex!(42, "example::mtx"), GFP_KERNEL); +//! Arc::pin_init(new_mutex!(42, c"example::mtx"), GFP_KERNEL); //! ``` //! //! To declare an init macro/function you just return an [`impl PinInit<T, E>`]: @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ //! impl DriverData { //! fn new() -> impl PinInit<Self, Error> { //! try_pin_init!(Self { -//! status <- new_mutex!(0, "DriverData::status"), +//! status <- new_mutex!(0, c"DriverData::status"), //! buffer: Box::init(kernel::init::zeroed(), GFP_KERNEL)?, //! }) //! } diff --git a/rust/kernel/kunit.rs b/rust/kernel/kunit.rs index 0ba77276ae7e..6da0d5e237b6 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/kunit.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/kunit.rs @@ -56,9 +56,13 @@ macro_rules! kunit_assert { break 'out; }
- static FILE: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!($file); + static FILE: &'static core::ffi::CStr = $file; static LINE: i32 = core::line!() as i32 - $diff; - static CONDITION: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!(stringify!($condition)); + static CONDITION: &'static core::ffi::CStr = unsafe { + core::ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked( + core::concat!(stringify!($condition), "\0").as_bytes() + ) + };
// SAFETY: FFI call without safety requirements. let kunit_test = unsafe { $crate::bindings::kunit_get_current_test() }; @@ -71,11 +75,11 @@ macro_rules! kunit_assert { // // This mimics KUnit's failed assertion format. $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( - " # {}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE}:{LINE}\n", + " # {:?}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE:?}:{LINE:?}\n", $name )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( - " Expected {CONDITION} to be true, but is false\n" + " Expected {CONDITION:?} to be true, but is false\n" )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( " Failure not reported to KUnit since this is a non-KUnit task\n" @@ -98,12 +102,12 @@ unsafe impl Sync for Location {} unsafe impl Sync for UnaryAssert {}
static LOCATION: Location = Location($crate::bindings::kunit_loc { - file: FILE.as_char_ptr(), + file: FILE.as_ptr(), line: LINE, }); static ASSERTION: UnaryAssert = UnaryAssert($crate::bindings::kunit_unary_assert { assert: $crate::bindings::kunit_assert {}, - condition: CONDITION.as_char_ptr(), + condition: CONDITION.as_ptr(), expected_true: true, });
diff --git a/rust/kernel/net/phy.rs b/rust/kernel/net/phy.rs index fd40b703d224..19f45922ec42 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/net/phy.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/net/phy.rs @@ -502,7 +502,7 @@ unsafe impl Sync for DriverVTable {} pub const fn create_phy_driver<T: Driver>() -> DriverVTable { // INVARIANT: All the fields of `struct phy_driver` are initialized properly. DriverVTable(Opaque::new(bindings::phy_driver { - name: T::NAME.as_char_ptr().cast_mut(), + name: T::NAME.as_ptr().cast_mut(), flags: T::FLAGS, phy_id: T::PHY_DEVICE_ID.id, phy_id_mask: T::PHY_DEVICE_ID.mask_as_int(), diff --git a/rust/kernel/prelude.rs b/rust/kernel/prelude.rs index b37a0b3180fb..5efabfaa5804 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/prelude.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/prelude.rs @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ //! ```
#[doc(no_inline)] -pub use core::pin::Pin; +pub use core::{ffi::CStr, pin::Pin};
pub use crate::alloc::{box_ext::BoxExt, flags::*, vec_ext::VecExt};
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@
pub use super::error::{code::*, Error, Result};
-pub use super::{str::CStr, ThisModule}; +pub use super::{ThisModule};
pub use super::init::{InPlaceInit, Init, PinInit};
diff --git a/rust/kernel/str.rs b/rust/kernel/str.rs index bb8d4f41475b..d1e6335a02a3 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/str.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/str.rs @@ -4,8 +4,9 @@
use crate::alloc::{flags::*, vec_ext::VecExt, AllocError}; use alloc::vec::Vec; +use core::ffi::CStr; use core::fmt::{self, Write}; -use core::ops::{self, Deref, DerefMut, Index}; +use core::ops::{Deref, DerefMut};
use crate::error::{code::*, Error};
@@ -41,11 +42,11 @@ impl fmt::Display for BStr { /// # use kernel::{fmt, b_str, str::{BStr, CString}}; /// let ascii = b_str!("Hello, BStr!"); /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}", ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes(), "Hello, BStr!".as_bytes()); + /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "Hello, BStr!".as_bytes()); /// /// let non_ascii = b_str!("🦀"); /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}", non_ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes(), "\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80".as_bytes()); + /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80".as_bytes()); /// ``` fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { for &b in &self.0 { @@ -72,11 +73,11 @@ impl fmt::Debug for BStr { /// // Embedded double quotes are escaped. /// let ascii = b_str!("Hello, "BStr"!"); /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{:?}", ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes(), ""Hello, \"BStr\"!"".as_bytes()); + /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), ""Hello, \"BStr\"!"".as_bytes()); /// /// let non_ascii = b_str!("😺"); /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{:?}", non_ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes(), ""\xf0\x9f\x98\xba"".as_bytes()); + /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), ""\xf0\x9f\x98\xba"".as_bytes()); /// ``` fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { f.write_char('"')?; @@ -128,477 +129,11 @@ macro_rules! b_str { }}; }
-/// Possible errors when using conversion functions in [`CStr`]. -#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy)] -pub enum CStrConvertError { - /// Supplied bytes contain an interior `NUL`. - InteriorNul, - - /// Supplied bytes are not terminated by `NUL`. - NotNulTerminated, -} - -impl From<CStrConvertError> for Error { - #[inline] - fn from(_: CStrConvertError) -> Error { - EINVAL - } -} - -/// A string that is guaranteed to have exactly one `NUL` byte, which is at the -/// end. -/// -/// Used for interoperability with kernel APIs that take C strings. -#[repr(transparent)] -pub struct CStr([u8]); - -impl CStr { - /// Returns the length of this string excluding `NUL`. - #[inline] - pub const fn len(&self) -> usize { - self.len_with_nul() - 1 - } - - /// Returns the length of this string with `NUL`. - #[inline] - pub const fn len_with_nul(&self) -> usize { - // SAFETY: This is one of the invariant of `CStr`. - // We add a `unreachable_unchecked` here to hint the optimizer that - // the value returned from this function is non-zero. - if self.0.is_empty() { - unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() }; - } - self.0.len() - } - - /// Returns `true` if the string only includes `NUL`. - #[inline] - pub const fn is_empty(&self) -> bool { - self.len() == 0 - } - - /// Wraps a raw C string pointer. - /// - /// # Safety - /// - /// `ptr` must be a valid pointer to a `NUL`-terminated C string, and it must - /// last at least `'a`. When `CStr` is alive, the memory pointed by `ptr` - /// must not be mutated. - #[inline] - pub unsafe fn from_char_ptr<'a>(ptr: *const core::ffi::c_char) -> &'a Self { - // SAFETY: The safety precondition guarantees `ptr` is a valid pointer - // to a `NUL`-terminated C string. - let len = unsafe { bindings::strlen(ptr) } + 1; - // SAFETY: Lifetime guaranteed by the safety precondition. - let bytes = unsafe { core::slice::from_raw_parts(ptr as _, len as _) }; - // SAFETY: As `len` is returned by `strlen`, `bytes` does not contain interior `NUL`. - // As we have added 1 to `len`, the last byte is known to be `NUL`. - unsafe { Self::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(bytes) } - } - - /// Creates a [`CStr`] from a `[u8]`. - /// - /// The provided slice must be `NUL`-terminated, does not contain any - /// interior `NUL` bytes. - pub const fn from_bytes_with_nul(bytes: &[u8]) -> Result<&Self, CStrConvertError> { - if bytes.is_empty() { - return Err(CStrConvertError::NotNulTerminated); - } - if bytes[bytes.len() - 1] != 0 { - return Err(CStrConvertError::NotNulTerminated); - } - let mut i = 0; - // `i + 1 < bytes.len()` allows LLVM to optimize away bounds checking, - // while it couldn't optimize away bounds checks for `i < bytes.len() - 1`. - while i + 1 < bytes.len() { - if bytes[i] == 0 { - return Err(CStrConvertError::InteriorNul); - } - i += 1; - } - // SAFETY: We just checked that all properties hold. - Ok(unsafe { Self::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(bytes) }) - } - - /// Creates a [`CStr`] from a `[u8]` without performing any additional - /// checks. - /// - /// # Safety - /// - /// `bytes` *must* end with a `NUL` byte, and should only have a single - /// `NUL` byte (or the string will be truncated). - #[inline] - pub const unsafe fn from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(bytes: &[u8]) -> &CStr { - // SAFETY: Properties of `bytes` guaranteed by the safety precondition. - unsafe { core::mem::transmute(bytes) } - } - - /// Creates a mutable [`CStr`] from a `[u8]` without performing any - /// additional checks. - /// - /// # Safety - /// - /// `bytes` *must* end with a `NUL` byte, and should only have a single - /// `NUL` byte (or the string will be truncated). - #[inline] - pub unsafe fn from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(bytes: &mut [u8]) -> &mut CStr { - // SAFETY: Properties of `bytes` guaranteed by the safety precondition. - unsafe { &mut *(bytes as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) } - } - - /// Returns a C pointer to the string. - #[inline] - pub const fn as_char_ptr(&self) -> *const core::ffi::c_char { - self.0.as_ptr() as _ - } - - /// Convert the string to a byte slice without the trailing `NUL` byte. - #[inline] - pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8] { - &self.0[..self.len()] - } - - /// Convert the string to a byte slice containing the trailing `NUL` byte. - #[inline] - pub const fn as_bytes_with_nul(&self) -> &[u8] { - &self.0 - } - - /// Yields a [`&str`] slice if the [`CStr`] contains valid UTF-8. - /// - /// If the contents of the [`CStr`] are valid UTF-8 data, this - /// function will return the corresponding [`&str`] slice. Otherwise, - /// it will return an error with details of where UTF-8 validation failed. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// # use kernel::str::CStr; - /// let cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"foo\0").unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(cstr.to_str(), Ok("foo")); - /// ``` - #[inline] - pub fn to_str(&self) -> Result<&str, core::str::Utf8Error> { - core::str::from_utf8(self.as_bytes()) - } - - /// Unsafely convert this [`CStr`] into a [`&str`], without checking for - /// valid UTF-8. - /// - /// # Safety - /// - /// The contents must be valid UTF-8. - /// - /// # Examples - /// - /// ``` - /// # use kernel::c_str; - /// # use kernel::str::CStr; - /// let bar = c_str!("ツ"); - /// // SAFETY: String literals are guaranteed to be valid UTF-8 - /// // by the Rust compiler. - /// assert_eq!(unsafe { bar.as_str_unchecked() }, "ツ"); - /// ``` - #[inline] - pub unsafe fn as_str_unchecked(&self) -> &str { - unsafe { core::str::from_utf8_unchecked(self.as_bytes()) } - } - - /// Convert this [`CStr`] into a [`CString`] by allocating memory and - /// copying over the string data. - pub fn to_cstring(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> { - CString::try_from(self) - } - - /// Converts this [`CStr`] to its ASCII lower case equivalent in-place. - /// - /// ASCII letters 'A' to 'Z' are mapped to 'a' to 'z', - /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged. - /// - /// To return a new lowercased value without modifying the existing one, use - /// [`to_ascii_lowercase()`]. - /// - /// [`to_ascii_lowercase()`]: #method.to_ascii_lowercase - pub fn make_ascii_lowercase(&mut self) { - // INVARIANT: This doesn't introduce or remove NUL bytes in the C - // string. - self.0.make_ascii_lowercase(); - } - - /// Converts this [`CStr`] to its ASCII upper case equivalent in-place. - /// - /// ASCII letters 'a' to 'z' are mapped to 'A' to 'Z', - /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged. - /// - /// To return a new uppercased value without modifying the existing one, use - /// [`to_ascii_uppercase()`]. - /// - /// [`to_ascii_uppercase()`]: #method.to_ascii_uppercase - pub fn make_ascii_uppercase(&mut self) { - // INVARIANT: This doesn't introduce or remove NUL bytes in the C - // string. - self.0.make_ascii_uppercase(); - } - - /// Returns a copy of this [`CString`] where each character is mapped to its - /// ASCII lower case equivalent. - /// - /// ASCII letters 'A' to 'Z' are mapped to 'a' to 'z', - /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged. - /// - /// To lowercase the value in-place, use [`make_ascii_lowercase`]. - /// - /// [`make_ascii_lowercase`]: str::make_ascii_lowercase - pub fn to_ascii_lowercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> { - let mut s = self.to_cstring()?; - - s.make_ascii_lowercase(); - - Ok(s) - } - - /// Returns a copy of this [`CString`] where each character is mapped to its - /// ASCII upper case equivalent. - /// - /// ASCII letters 'a' to 'z' are mapped to 'A' to 'Z', - /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged. - /// - /// To uppercase the value in-place, use [`make_ascii_uppercase`]. - /// - /// [`make_ascii_uppercase`]: str::make_ascii_uppercase - pub fn to_ascii_uppercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> { - let mut s = self.to_cstring()?; - - s.make_ascii_uppercase(); - - Ok(s) - } -} - -impl fmt::Display for CStr { - /// Formats printable ASCII characters, escaping the rest. - /// - /// ``` - /// # use kernel::c_str; - /// # use kernel::fmt; - /// # use kernel::str::CStr; - /// # use kernel::str::CString; - /// let penguin = c_str!("🐧"); - /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}", penguin)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), "\xf0\x9f\x90\xa7\0".as_bytes()); - /// - /// let ascii = c_str!("so "cool""); - /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}", ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), "so "cool"\0".as_bytes()); - /// ``` - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - for &c in self.as_bytes() { - if (0x20..0x7f).contains(&c) { - // Printable character. - f.write_char(c as char)?; - } else { - write!(f, "\x{:02x}", c)?; - } - } - Ok(()) - } -} - -impl fmt::Debug for CStr { - /// Formats printable ASCII characters with a double quote on either end, escaping the rest. - /// - /// ``` - /// # use kernel::c_str; - /// # use kernel::fmt; - /// # use kernel::str::CStr; - /// # use kernel::str::CString; - /// let penguin = c_str!("🐧"); - /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{:?}", penguin)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), ""\xf0\x9f\x90\xa7"\0".as_bytes()); - /// - /// // Embedded double quotes are escaped. - /// let ascii = c_str!("so "cool""); - /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{:?}", ascii)).unwrap(); - /// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), ""so \"cool\""\0".as_bytes()); - /// ``` - fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { - f.write_str(""")?; - for &c in self.as_bytes() { - match c { - // Printable characters. - b'"' => f.write_str("\"")?, - 0x20..=0x7e => f.write_char(c as char)?, - _ => write!(f, "\x{:02x}", c)?, - } - } - f.write_str(""") - } -} - -impl AsRef<BStr> for CStr { - #[inline] - fn as_ref(&self) -> &BStr { - BStr::from_bytes(self.as_bytes()) - } -} - -impl Deref for CStr { - type Target = BStr; - - #[inline] - fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { - self.as_ref() - } -} - -impl Index<ops::RangeFrom<usize>> for CStr { - type Output = CStr; - - #[inline] - fn index(&self, index: ops::RangeFrom<usize>) -> &Self::Output { - // Delegate bounds checking to slice. - // Assign to _ to mute clippy's unnecessary operation warning. - let _ = &self.as_bytes()[index.start..]; - // SAFETY: We just checked the bounds. - unsafe { Self::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(&self.0[index.start..]) } - } -} - -impl Indexops::RangeFull for CStr { - type Output = CStr; - - #[inline] - fn index(&self, _index: ops::RangeFull) -> &Self::Output { - self - } -} - -mod private { - use core::ops; - - // Marker trait for index types that can be forward to `BStr`. - pub trait CStrIndex {} - - impl CStrIndex for usize {} - impl CStrIndex for ops::Range<usize> {} - impl CStrIndex for ops::RangeInclusive<usize> {} - impl CStrIndex for ops::RangeToInclusive<usize> {} -} - -impl<Idx> Index<Idx> for CStr -where - Idx: private::CStrIndex, - BStr: Index<Idx>, -{ - type Output = <BStr as Index<Idx>>::Output; - - #[inline] - fn index(&self, index: Idx) -> &Self::Output { - &self.as_ref()[index] - } -} - -/// Creates a new [`CStr`] from a string literal. -/// -/// The string literal should not contain any `NUL` bytes. -/// -/// # Examples -/// -/// ``` -/// # use kernel::c_str; -/// # use kernel::str::CStr; -/// const MY_CSTR: &CStr = c_str!("My awesome CStr!"); -/// ``` -#[macro_export] -macro_rules! c_str { - ($str:expr) => {{ - const S: &str = concat!($str, "\0"); - const C: &$crate::str::CStr = match $crate::str::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(S.as_bytes()) { - Ok(v) => v, - Err(_) => panic!("string contains interior NUL"), - }; - C - }}; -} - #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use super::*; use alloc::format;
- const ALL_ASCII_CHARS: &'static str = - "\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x0a\x0b\x0c\x0d\x0e\x0f\ - \x10\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16\x17\x18\x19\x1a\x1b\x1c\x1d\x1e\x1f \ - !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@\ - ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~\x7f\ - \x80\x81\x82\x83\x84\x85\x86\x87\x88\x89\x8a\x8b\x8c\x8d\x8e\x8f\ - \x90\x91\x92\x93\x94\x95\x96\x97\x98\x99\x9a\x9b\x9c\x9d\x9e\x9f\ - \xa0\xa1\xa2\xa3\xa4\xa5\xa6\xa7\xa8\xa9\xaa\xab\xac\xad\xae\xaf\ - \xb0\xb1\xb2\xb3\xb4\xb5\xb6\xb7\xb8\xb9\xba\xbb\xbc\xbd\xbe\xbf\ - \xc0\xc1\xc2\xc3\xc4\xc5\xc6\xc7\xc8\xc9\xca\xcb\xcc\xcd\xce\xcf\ - \xd0\xd1\xd2\xd3\xd4\xd5\xd6\xd7\xd8\xd9\xda\xdb\xdc\xdd\xde\xdf\ - \xe0\xe1\xe2\xe3\xe4\xe5\xe6\xe7\xe8\xe9\xea\xeb\xec\xed\xee\xef\ - \xf0\xf1\xf2\xf3\xf4\xf5\xf6\xf7\xf8\xf9\xfa\xfb\xfc\xfd\xfe\xff"; - - #[test] - fn test_cstr_to_str() { - let good_bytes = b"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80\0"; - let checked_cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(good_bytes).unwrap(); - let checked_str = checked_cstr.to_str().unwrap(); - assert_eq!(checked_str, "🦀"); - } - - #[test] - #[should_panic] - fn test_cstr_to_str_panic() { - let bad_bytes = b"\xc3\x28\0"; - let checked_cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(bad_bytes).unwrap(); - checked_cstr.to_str().unwrap(); - } - - #[test] - fn test_cstr_as_str_unchecked() { - let good_bytes = b"\xf0\x9f\x90\xA7\0"; - let checked_cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(good_bytes).unwrap(); - let unchecked_str = unsafe { checked_cstr.as_str_unchecked() }; - assert_eq!(unchecked_str, "🐧"); - } - - #[test] - fn test_cstr_display() { - let hello_world = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"hello, world!\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{}", hello_world), "hello, world!"); - let non_printables = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"\x01\x09\x0a\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{}", non_printables), "\x01\x09\x0a"); - let non_ascii = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"d\xe9j\xe0 vu\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{}", non_ascii), "d\xe9j\xe0 vu"); - let good_bytes = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{}", good_bytes), "\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80"); - } - - #[test] - fn test_cstr_display_all_bytes() { - let mut bytes: [u8; 256] = [0; 256]; - // fill `bytes` with [1..=255] + [0] - for i in u8::MIN..=u8::MAX { - bytes[i as usize] = i.wrapping_add(1); - } - let cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(&bytes).unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{}", cstr), ALL_ASCII_CHARS); - } - - #[test] - fn test_cstr_debug() { - let hello_world = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"hello, world!\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", hello_world), ""hello, world!""); - let non_printables = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"\x01\x09\x0a\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", non_printables), ""\x01\x09\x0a""); - let non_ascii = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"d\xe9j\xe0 vu\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", non_ascii), ""d\xe9j\xe0 vu""); - let good_bytes = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(b"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80\0").unwrap(); - assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", good_bytes), ""\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80""); - } - #[test] fn test_bstr_display() { let hello_world = BStr::from_bytes(b"hello, world!"); @@ -779,11 +314,11 @@ fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result { /// use kernel::{str::CString, fmt}; /// /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}{}{}", "abc", 10, 20)).unwrap(); -/// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), "abc1020\0".as_bytes()); +/// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "abc1020\0".as_bytes()); /// /// let tmp = "testing"; /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{tmp}{}", 123)).unwrap(); -/// assert_eq!(s.as_bytes_with_nul(), "testing123\0".as_bytes()); +/// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "testing123\0".as_bytes()); /// /// // This fails because it has an embedded `NUL` byte. /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("a\0b{}", 123)); @@ -840,9 +375,10 @@ fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
impl DerefMut for CString { fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target { - // SAFETY: A `CString` is always NUL-terminated and contains no other - // NUL bytes. - unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(self.buf.as_mut_slice()) } + debug_assert!(!self.buf.is_empty() && self.buf[self.buf.len() - 1] == 0); + // SAFETY: Casting to CStr is safe because its internal representation + // is a [u8] too. + unsafe { &mut *(self.buf.as_mut_slice() as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) } } }
@@ -852,7 +388,7 @@ impl<'a> TryFrom<&'a CStr> for CString { fn try_from(cstr: &'a CStr) -> Result<CString, AllocError> { let mut buf = Vec::new();
- <Vec<_> as VecExt<_>>::extend_from_slice(&mut buf, cstr.as_bytes_with_nul(), GFP_KERNEL) + <Vec<_> as VecExt<_>>::extend_from_slice(&mut buf, cstr.to_bytes_with_nul(), GFP_KERNEL) .map_err(|_| AllocError)?;
// INVARIANT: The `CStr` and `CString` types have the same invariants for diff --git a/rust/kernel/sync.rs b/rust/kernel/sync.rs index 0ab20975a3b5..f909e7bb2070 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/sync.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/sync.rs @@ -59,9 +59,18 @@ macro_rules! static_lock_class { #[macro_export] macro_rules! optional_name { () => { - $crate::c_str!(::core::concat!(::core::file!(), ":", ::core::line!())) + unsafe { + CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked( + ::core::concat!( + ::core::file!(), + ":", + ::core::line!(), + "\0" + ).as_bytes() + ) + } }; ($name:literal) => { - $crate::c_str!($name) + $name }; } diff --git a/rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs b/rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs index 2b306afbe56d..16d1a1cb8d00 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs @@ -9,12 +9,11 @@ use crate::{ init::PinInit, pin_init, - str::CStr, task::{MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT, TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE, TASK_NORMAL, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE}, time::Jiffies, types::Opaque, }; -use core::ffi::{c_int, c_long}; +use core::ffi::{c_int, c_long, CStr}; use core::marker::PhantomPinned; use core::ptr; use macros::pin_data; @@ -108,7 +107,7 @@ pub fn new(name: &'static CStr, key: &'static LockClassKey) -> impl PinInit<Self // SAFETY: `slot` is valid while the closure is called and both `name` and `key` have // static lifetimes so they live indefinitely. wait_queue_head <- Opaque::ffi_init(|slot| unsafe { - bindings::__init_waitqueue_head(slot, name.as_char_ptr(), key.as_ptr()) + bindings::__init_waitqueue_head(slot, name.as_ptr(), key.as_ptr()) }), }) } diff --git a/rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs b/rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs index f6c34ca4d819..318ecb5a5916 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@ //! spinlocks, raw spinlocks) to be provided with minimal effort.
use super::LockClassKey; -use crate::{init::PinInit, pin_init, str::CStr, types::Opaque, types::ScopeGuard}; -use core::{cell::UnsafeCell, marker::PhantomData, marker::PhantomPinned}; +use crate::{init::PinInit, pin_init, types::Opaque, types::ScopeGuard}; +use core::{cell::UnsafeCell, ffi::CStr, marker::PhantomData, marker::PhantomPinned}; use macros::pin_data;
pub mod mutex; @@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ pub fn new(t: T, name: &'static CStr, key: &'static LockClassKey) -> impl PinIni // SAFETY: `slot` is valid while the closure is called and both `name` and `key` have // static lifetimes so they live indefinitely. state <- Opaque::ffi_init(|slot| unsafe { - B::init(slot, name.as_char_ptr(), key.as_ptr()) + B::init(slot, name.as_ptr(), key.as_ptr()) }), }) } diff --git a/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs index 553a5cba2adc..b1f5c4b5840c 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ //! fn new(value: i32) -> Result<Arc<Self>> { //! Arc::pin_init(pin_init!(MyStruct { //! value, -//! work <- new_work!("MyStruct::work"), +//! work <- new_work!(c"MyStruct::work"), //! }), GFP_KERNEL) //! } //! } @@ -97,8 +97,8 @@ //! Arc::pin_init(pin_init!(MyStruct { //! value_1, //! value_2, -//! work_1 <- new_work!("MyStruct::work_1"), -//! work_2 <- new_work!("MyStruct::work_2"), +//! work_1 <- new_work!(c"MyStruct::work_1"), +//! work_2 <- new_work!(c"MyStruct::work_2"), //! }), GFP_KERNEL) //! } //! } @@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ pub fn try_spawn<T: 'static + Send + FnOnce()>( func: T, ) -> Result<(), AllocError> { let init = pin_init!(ClosureWork { - work <- new_work!("Queue::try_spawn"), + work <- new_work!(c"Queue::try_spawn"), func: Some(func), });
@@ -380,7 +380,7 @@ pub fn new(name: &'static CStr, key: &'static LockClassKey) -> impl PinInit<Self slot, Some(T::Pointer::run), false, - name.as_char_ptr(), + name.as_ptr(), key.as_ptr(), ) } diff --git a/scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs b/scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs index 5ebd42ae4a3f..339991ee6885 100644 --- a/scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs +++ b/scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs @@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ pub extern "C" fn {kunit_name}(__kunit_test: *mut kernel::bindings::kunit) {{ #[allow(unused)] macro_rules! assert {{ ($cond:expr $(,)?) => {{{{ - kernel::kunit_assert!("{kunit_name}", "{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $cond); + kernel::kunit_assert!(c"{kunit_name}", c"{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $cond); }}}} }}
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ macro_rules! assert {{ #[allow(unused)] macro_rules! assert_eq {{ ($left:expr, $right:expr $(,)?) => {{{{ - kernel::kunit_assert_eq!("{kunit_name}", "{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $left, $right); + kernel::kunit_assert_eq!(c"{kunit_name}", c"{real_path}", __DOCTEST_ANCHOR - {line}, $left, $right); }}}} }}
On Sunday, July 14th, 2024 at 18:02, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
`core::CStr` behaves generally the same as the removed implementation, with the following differences:
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
- It does not provide `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut` method.
- It was used only in `DerefMut` implementation for `CString`. This change replaces it with a manual cast to `&mut CStr`.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
- It has `as_ptr()` method instead of `as_char_ptr()`, which also returns `*const c_char`.
Rust also introduces C literals (`c""`), so the `c_str` macro is removed here as well.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com
rust/kernel/error.rs | 7 +- rust/kernel/init.rs | 8 +- rust/kernel/kunit.rs | 16 +- rust/kernel/net/phy.rs | 2 +- rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 4 +- rust/kernel/str.rs | 490 +----------------------------------- rust/kernel/sync.rs | 13 +- rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs | 5 +- rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs | 6 +- rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 10 +- scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs | 4 +- 11 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 508 deletions(-)
[snip]
diff --git a/rust/kernel/init.rs b/rust/kernel/init.rs index 68605b633e73..af0017e56c0e 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/init.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/init.rs @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ //! } //! //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"),
That we need a CStr here seems a bit of an internal implementation detail. Maybe keep accepting a regular string literal and converting it to a CStr internally? If others think what you have here is fine, I don't it mind all that much though.
//! b: 24, //! }); //! ```
[snip]
@@ -840,9 +375,10 @@ fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
impl DerefMut for CString { fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
// SAFETY: A `CString` is always NUL-terminated and contains no other
// NUL bytes.
unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(self.buf.as_mut_slice()) }
debug_assert!(!self.buf.is_empty() && self.buf[self.buf.len() - 1] == 0);
// SAFETY: Casting to CStr is safe because its internal representation
// is a [u8] too.
unsafe { &mut *(self.buf.as_mut_slice() as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) }
The documentation of CStr [1] is very clear that the layout of CStr is not guaranteed.
Note that this structure does not have a guaranteed layout (the repr(transparent) notwithstanding) and is not recommended to be placed in the signatures of FFI functions. Instead, safe wrappers of FFI functions may leverage the unsafe CStr::from_ptr constructor to provide a safe interface to other consumers.
Is there any place where this DerefMut impl is actually used? If not it should probably be removed. The liballoc version of CString doesn't have this impl either. (Can we use the liballoc version of CString too just like this patch does for CStr?)
[snip]
Link: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ffi/struct.CStr.html [1]
On 14.07.24 19:01, Björn Roy Baron wrote:
On Sunday, July 14th, 2024 at 18:02, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
`core::CStr` behaves generally the same as the removed implementation, with the following differences:
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
- It does not provide `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut` method.
- It was used only in `DerefMut` implementation for `CString`. This change replaces it with a manual cast to `&mut CStr`.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
- It has `as_ptr()` method instead of `as_char_ptr()`, which also returns `*const c_char`.
Rust also introduces C literals (`c""`), so the `c_str` macro is removed here as well.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com
rust/kernel/error.rs | 7 +- rust/kernel/init.rs | 8 +- rust/kernel/kunit.rs | 16 +- rust/kernel/net/phy.rs | 2 +- rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 4 +- rust/kernel/str.rs | 490 +----------------------------------- rust/kernel/sync.rs | 13 +- rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs | 5 +- rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs | 6 +- rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 10 +- scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs | 4 +- 11 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 508 deletions(-)
[snip]
diff --git a/rust/kernel/init.rs b/rust/kernel/init.rs index 68605b633e73..af0017e56c0e 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/init.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/init.rs @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ //! } //! //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"),
That we need a CStr here seems a bit of an internal implementation detail. Maybe keep accepting a regular string literal and converting it to a CStr internally? If others think what you have here is fine, I don't it mind all that much though.
The names passed to `new_mutex`, `new_condvar`, `new_spinlock` etc. are immediately passed in the FFI calls (`__mutex_init`, `__init_waitqueue_head`, `__spin_lock_init`) [0][1][2]. In fact, I don't see any internal usage, where using Rust &str would be beneficial. Am I missing something?
Converting a &str to &CStr inside `Mutex::new` or `CondVar::new` would require allocating a new buffer, larger by 1, to include the nul byte. Doing that for every new mutex or condvar seems a bit wasteful to me.
[0] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [1] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [2] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146...
//! b: 24, //! }); //! ```
[snip]
@@ -840,9 +375,10 @@ fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
impl DerefMut for CString { fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
// SAFETY: A `CString` is always NUL-terminated and contains no other
// NUL bytes.
unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(self.buf.as_mut_slice()) }
debug_assert!(!self.buf.is_empty() && self.buf[self.buf.len() - 1] == 0);
// SAFETY: Casting to CStr is safe because its internal representation
// is a [u8] too.
unsafe { &mut *(self.buf.as_mut_slice() as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) }
The documentation of CStr [1] is very clear that the layout of CStr is not guaranteed.
Note that this structure does not have a guaranteed layout (the repr(transparent) notwithstanding) and is not recommended to be placed in the signatures of FFI functions. Instead, safe wrappers of FFI functions may leverage the unsafe CStr::from_ptr constructor to provide a safe interface to other consumers.
Is there any place where this DerefMut impl is actually used? If not it should probably be removed. The liballoc version of CString doesn't have this impl either. (Can we use the liballoc version of CString too just like this patch does for CStr?)
[snip]
Link: https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ffi/struct.CStr.html [1]
Good call. The `DerefMut` was not used anywhere, removing it works.
On Monday, July 15th, 2024 at 17:46, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
On 14.07.24 19:01, Björn Roy Baron wrote:
On Sunday, July 14th, 2024 at 18:02, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
`core::CStr` behaves generally the same as the removed implementation, with the following differences:
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
- It does not provide `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut` method.
- It was used only in `DerefMut` implementation for `CString`. This change replaces it with a manual cast to `&mut CStr`.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
- It has `as_ptr()` method instead of `as_char_ptr()`, which also returns `*const c_char`.
Rust also introduces C literals (`c""`), so the `c_str` macro is removed here as well.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com
rust/kernel/error.rs | 7 +- rust/kernel/init.rs | 8 +- rust/kernel/kunit.rs | 16 +- rust/kernel/net/phy.rs | 2 +- rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 4 +- rust/kernel/str.rs | 490 +----------------------------------- rust/kernel/sync.rs | 13 +- rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs | 5 +- rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs | 6 +- rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 10 +- scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs | 4 +- 11 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 508 deletions(-)
[snip]
diff --git a/rust/kernel/init.rs b/rust/kernel/init.rs index 68605b633e73..af0017e56c0e 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/init.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/init.rs @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ //! } //! //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"),
That we need a CStr here seems a bit of an internal implementation detail. Maybe keep accepting a regular string literal and converting it to a CStr internally? If others think what you have here is fine, I don't it mind all that much though.
The names passed to `new_mutex`, `new_condvar`, `new_spinlock` etc. are immediately passed in the FFI calls (`__mutex_init`, `__init_waitqueue_head`, `__spin_lock_init`) [0][1][2]. In fact, I don't see any internal usage, where using Rust &str would be beneficial. Am I missing something?
Converting a &str to &CStr inside `Mutex::new` or `CondVar::new` would require allocating a new buffer, larger by 1, to include the nul byte. Doing that for every new mutex or condvar seems a bit wasteful to me.
The names passed to `new_mutex!` and such are literals known at compile time. This means we can keep adding the nul terminator at compile time without allocating any extra buffer. Basically just adapting the current implementation of `optional_name!` to produce an `core::ffi::&CStr` rather than a `kernel::str::CStr` from a regular string literal is enough to avoid having to explicitly use C string literals in those macro invocations. This way users don't need to know that internally an `&CStr` is used.
[0] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [1] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [2] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146...
[snip]
On 15.07.24 17:56, Björn Roy Baron wrote:
On Monday, July 15th, 2024 at 17:46, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
On 14.07.24 19:01, Björn Roy Baron wrote:
On Sunday, July 14th, 2024 at 18:02, Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
`core::CStr` behaves generally the same as the removed implementation, with the following differences:
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
- It does not provide `from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut` method.
- It was used only in `DerefMut` implementation for `CString`. This change replaces it with a manual cast to `&mut CStr`.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
- It has `as_ptr()` method instead of `as_char_ptr()`, which also returns `*const c_char`.
Rust also introduces C literals (`c""`), so the `c_str` macro is removed here as well.
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com
rust/kernel/error.rs | 7 +- rust/kernel/init.rs | 8 +- rust/kernel/kunit.rs | 16 +- rust/kernel/net/phy.rs | 2 +- rust/kernel/prelude.rs | 4 +- rust/kernel/str.rs | 490 +----------------------------------- rust/kernel/sync.rs | 13 +- rust/kernel/sync/condvar.rs | 5 +- rust/kernel/sync/lock.rs | 6 +- rust/kernel/workqueue.rs | 10 +- scripts/rustdoc_test_gen.rs | 4 +- 11 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 508 deletions(-)
[snip]
diff --git a/rust/kernel/init.rs b/rust/kernel/init.rs index 68605b633e73..af0017e56c0e 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/init.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/init.rs @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ //! } //! //! let foo = pin_init!(Foo { -//! a <- new_mutex!(42, "Foo::a"), +//! a <- new_mutex!(42, c"Foo::a"),
That we need a CStr here seems a bit of an internal implementation detail. Maybe keep accepting a regular string literal and converting it to a CStr internally? If others think what you have here is fine, I don't it mind all that much though.
The names passed to `new_mutex`, `new_condvar`, `new_spinlock` etc. are immediately passed in the FFI calls (`__mutex_init`, `__init_waitqueue_head`, `__spin_lock_init`) [0][1][2]. In fact, I don't see any internal usage, where using Rust &str would be beneficial. Am I missing something?
Converting a &str to &CStr inside `Mutex::new` or `CondVar::new` would require allocating a new buffer, larger by 1, to include the nul byte. Doing that for every new mutex or condvar seems a bit wasteful to me.
The names passed to `new_mutex!` and such are literals known at compile time. This means we can keep adding the nul terminator at compile time without allocating any extra buffer. Basically just adapting the current implementation of `optional_name!` to produce an `core::ffi::&CStr` rather than a `kernel::str::CStr` from a regular string literal is enough to avoid having to explicitly use C string literals in those macro invocations. This way users don't need to know that internally an `&CStr` is used.
OK, good point, I can indeed handle that in `optional_name!`.
[0] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [1] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146... [2] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/b1263411112305acf2af72872859146...
[snip]
Hi Michal,
Thanks for the patch! Some notes below...
On Sun, Jul 14, 2024 at 6:02 PM Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
It would depend on the differences, right? i.e. for a reader, is this meant to imply there is no meaningful difference in what you point out below?
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
One question that comes up when reading this is: are we losing `Display`'s output form?
Also, for clarity, please mention if there is a difference in the output of the `Debug` ones.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
The sentence seems to be cut, and it should probably try to explain better why it is undesirable, i.e. if it is needed for something like `DerefMut`, then it seems better to have a method.
static CONDITION: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!(stringify!($condition));
static CONDITION: &'static core::ffi::CStr = unsafe {
core::ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(
core::concat!(stringify!($condition), "\0").as_bytes()
)
};
This looks worse after the change and requires `unsafe`. Can we do something to improve it?
// SAFETY: Casting to CStr is safe because its internal representation
// is a [u8] too.
unsafe { &mut *(self.buf.as_mut_slice() as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) }
I see Björn commented on this already -- `CStr`'s layout is not guaranteed (and is a `[c_char]` instead).
Also, the casting is not what is unsafe, so perhaps it may be clearer to reword the comment.
In addition, please format comments as Markdown.
-//! work <- new_work!("MyStruct::work"), +//! work <- new_work!(c"MyStruct::work"),
I agree as well that it may make sense to simplify the callers as much as possible, unless there is a need to have that flexibility.
Cheers, Miguel
On 14.07.24 19:30, Miguel Ojeda wrote:
Hi Michal,
Thanks for the patch! Some notes below...
On Sun, Jul 14, 2024 at 6:02 PM Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
`CStr` became a part of `core` library in Rust 1.75, therefore there is no need to keep the custom implementation.
It would depend on the differences, right? i.e. for a reader, is this meant to imply there is no meaningful difference in what you point out below?
Alright, I will remove the second part of the sentence.
- It does not implement `Display` (but implements `Debug`).
One question that comes up when reading this is: are we losing `Display`'s output form?
Yes, we are losing the `Display` trait implementation by switching to `core::ffi::CStr`.
I was thinking whether I should keep `kernel::str::CStr` as a wrapper, just to keep the `Display` implementation. I could still do that if you want. I'm also open for other solutions.
The reason why I decided to not do that and go ahead without `Display` is that it was used only in rust/kernel/kunit.rs inside `kunit_assert`, for formatting the file and path the error message. This diff:
@@ -71,11 +75,11 @@ macro_rules! kunit_assert { // // This mimics KUnit's failed assertion format. $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( - " # {}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE}:{LINE}\n", + " # {:?}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE:?}:{LINE:?}\n", $name )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!( - " Expected {CONDITION} to be true, but is false\n" + " Expected {CONDITION:?} to be true, but is false\n" ));
The only practical difference in switching from `Display` to `Debug` here is that the fallback kunit error messages are going to include quotation marks around conditions, files and lines.
Also, for clarity, please mention if there is a difference in the output of the `Debug` ones.
There isn't any difference, I will mention that.
- Otherwise, having such a method is not really desirable. `CStr` is a reference type or `str` are usually not supposed to be modified.
The sentence seems to be cut, and it should probably try to explain better why it is undesirable, i.e. if it is needed for something like `DerefMut`, then it seems better to have a method.
Regarding `DerefMut` implementation for `CString` - we don't need it. Or at least - removing it (after my CStr patch), does not break anything. If that's fine for you, I'm going to remove it in v2 all together.
About why having `&mut CStr` is undesirable - I will try to find better wording. My general point is that I've never seen `&mut str` being exposed in any core/std API to the external user, mutation usually implies usage of an owned String.
static CONDITION: &'static $crate::str::CStr = $crate::c_str!(stringify!($condition));
static CONDITION: &'static core::ffi::CStr = unsafe {
core::ffi::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(
core::concat!(stringify!($condition), "\0").as_bytes()
)
};
This looks worse after the change and requires `unsafe`. Can we do something to improve it?
I think the best solution would be leaving `c_str` macro for that. The reason why I removed it is that the GitHub issue[0] mentions its removal. But for that case, I think it makes sense to leave it. What do you think?
[0] https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/1075
// SAFETY: Casting to CStr is safe because its internal representation
// is a [u8] too.
unsafe { &mut *(self.buf.as_mut_slice() as *mut [u8] as *mut CStr) }
I see Björn commented on this already -- `CStr`'s layout is not guaranteed (and is a `[c_char]` instead).
Also, the casting is not what is unsafe, so perhaps it may be clearer to reword the comment.
In addition, please format comments as Markdown.
Good point, I will fix the comment.
-//! work <- new_work!("MyStruct::work"), +//! work <- new_work!(c"MyStruct::work"),
I agree as well that it may make sense to simplify the callers as much as possible, unless there is a need to have that flexibility.
I already replied to Björn - names passed to `new_work!`, `new_mutex!` are immediatelly passed to FFI calls and are not used in the Rust code internally, so I prefer to keep them as C strings rather than Rust strings.
Cheers, Miguel
Cheers, Michal
On Mon, Jul 15, 2024 at 6:12 PM Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
@@ -71,11 +75,11 @@ macro_rules! kunit_assert { // // This mimics KUnit's failed assertion format. $crate::kunit::err(format_args!(
" # {}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE}:{LINE}\n",
" # {:?}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE:?}:{LINE:?}\n", $name )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!(
" Expected {CONDITION} to be true, but is false\n"
" Expected {CONDITION:?} to be true, but is false\n" ));
The only practical difference in switching from `Display` to `Debug` here is that the fallback kunit error messages are going to include quotation marks around conditions, files and lines.
That is a fairly important difference -- the messages are intended to match the C KUnit ones.
Especially the file:line notation -- I don't think a user would expect to have quotes there (regardless of KUnit).
In general, even if we didn't need it right now, I think it is something we will need sooner or later.
wording. My general point is that I've never seen `&mut str` being exposed in any core/std API to the external user, mutation usually implies usage of an owned String.
Not sure what you mean by exposed, but even if `&mut str`'s methods do not count (used via `String`), there is also `from_utf8_unchecked_mut()` that returns one, which is essentially the same idea as what we had here.
So I am not sure about the "The rule of Rust std" part in the new commit messages. And, to be clear, while the Rust standard library is a good reference to look into, sometimes we want/need to do things differently anyway (which is not really the case here given `from_utf8_unchecked_mut()`, I would say).
In this case, regardless of the standard library, personally I would have preferred to have a non-public function, but still have it (and properly documented), rather than open code the `unsafe` block with the casts.
I think the best solution would be leaving `c_str` macro for that. The reason why I removed it is that the GitHub issue[0] mentions its removal. But for that case, I think it makes sense to leave it. What do you think?
Perhaps the issue was only taking into account the C string literal case? Benno may know more.
Generally speaking, replacing a clean line with a bigger `unsafe` block is something to be avoided.
Maybe a `c_stringify!` is what we need :)
Cheers, Miguel
On 16.07.24 09:44, Miguel Ojeda wrote:
On Mon, Jul 15, 2024 at 6:12 PM Michal Rostecki vadorovsky@gmail.com wrote:
@@ -71,11 +75,11 @@ macro_rules! kunit_assert { // // This mimics KUnit's failed assertion format. $crate::kunit::err(format_args!(
" # {}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE}:{LINE}\n",
" # {:?}: ASSERTION FAILED at {FILE:?}:{LINE:?}\n", $name )); $crate::kunit::err(format_args!(
" Expected {CONDITION} to be true, but is false\n"
" Expected {CONDITION:?} to be true, but is false\n" ));
The only practical difference in switching from `Display` to `Debug` here is that the fallback kunit error messages are going to include quotation marks around conditions, files and lines.
That is a fairly important difference -- the messages are intended to match the C KUnit ones.
Especially the file:line notation -- I don't think a user would expect to have quotes there (regardless of KUnit).
In general, even if we didn't need it right now, I think it is something we will need sooner or later.
Alright, I will go with Trevor's suggestion and provide a `display()` method via an extension trait.
wording. My general point is that I've never seen `&mut str` being exposed in any core/std API to the external user, mutation usually implies usage of an owned String.
Not sure what you mean by exposed, but even if `&mut str`'s methods do not count (used via `String`), there is also `from_utf8_unchecked_mut()` that returns one, which is essentially the same idea as what we had here.
So I am not sure about the "The rule of Rust std" part in the new commit messages. And, to be clear, while the Rust standard library is a good reference to look into, sometimes we want/need to do things differently anyway (which is not really the case here given `from_utf8_unchecked_mut()`, I would say).
In this case, regardless of the standard library, personally I would have preferred to have a non-public function, but still have it (and properly documented), rather than open code the `unsafe` block with the casts.
Fair enough. I will provide `from_utf8_unchecked_mut()` as a part of `CStrExt` in the next version.
I think the best solution would be leaving `c_str` macro for that. The reason why I removed it is that the GitHub issue[0] mentions its removal. But for that case, I think it makes sense to leave it. What do you think?
Perhaps the issue was only taking into account the C string literal case? Benno may know more.
Generally speaking, replacing a clean line with a bigger `unsafe` block is something to be avoided.
Maybe a `c_stringify!` is what we need :)
`stringify!` is not the only case where I ended up using `c_str!`. After addressing Björn's suggestion about taking Rust strings as arguments in `new_mutex!`, `new_condvar!` etc., `optional_name!` is also using `c_str!` in the following way:
macro_rules! optional_name { () => { $crate::c_str!(::core::concat!(::core::file!(), ":", ::core::line!())) }; ($name:literal) => { $crate::c_str!($name) }; }
So I think that leaving `c_str!` still makes sense, unless you have other suggestions, which are still easily applicable there. :)
Cheers, Miguel
Cheers, Michal
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