bianbu-linux-6.6/rust/kernel/sync/arc.rs
Wedson Almeida Filho 17f671602c rust: sync: introduce ArcBorrow
This allows us to create references to a ref-counted allocation without
double-indirection and that still allow us to increment the refcount to
a new `Arc<T>`.

Signed-off-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Acked-by: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Reviewed-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2023-01-16 23:47:57 +01:00

307 lines
10 KiB
Rust

// 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::Opaque};
use alloc::boxed::Box;
use core::{
marker::{PhantomData, Unsize},
mem::ManuallyDrop,
ops::Deref,
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;
///
/// trait MyTrait {}
///
/// 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> {}
// 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: ?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()) };
}
}
}
/// 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));
/// ```
pub struct ArcBorrow<'a, T: ?Sized + 'a> {
inner: NonNull<ArcInner<T>>,
_p: PhantomData<&'a ()>,
}
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 }
}
}