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	Before we remove Rust's alloc crate, rewrite the module comment in alloc.rs to avoid a rustdoc warning. Besides that, the module comment in alloc.rs isn't correct anymore, we're no longer extending Rust's alloc crate. Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com> Reviewed-by: Benno Lossin <benno.lossin@proton.me> Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net> Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241004154149.93856-28-dakr@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
		
			
				
	
	
		
			224 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			8.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			224 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			8.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Rust
		
	
	
	
	
	
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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//! Implementation of the kernel's memory allocation infrastructure.
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#[cfg(not(any(test, testlib)))]
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pub mod allocator;
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pub mod kbox;
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pub mod kvec;
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pub mod layout;
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#[cfg(any(test, testlib))]
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pub mod allocator_test;
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#[cfg(any(test, testlib))]
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pub use self::allocator_test as allocator;
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pub use self::kbox::Box;
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pub use self::kbox::KBox;
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pub use self::kbox::KVBox;
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pub use self::kbox::VBox;
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pub use self::kvec::IntoIter;
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pub use self::kvec::KVVec;
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pub use self::kvec::KVec;
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pub use self::kvec::VVec;
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pub use self::kvec::Vec;
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/// Indicates an allocation error.
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#[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
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pub struct AllocError;
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use core::{alloc::Layout, ptr::NonNull};
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/// Flags to be used when allocating memory.
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///
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/// They can be combined with the operators `|`, `&`, and `!`.
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///
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/// Values can be used from the [`flags`] module.
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#[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq)]
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pub struct Flags(u32);
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impl Flags {
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    /// Get the raw representation of this flag.
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    pub(crate) fn as_raw(self) -> u32 {
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        self.0
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    }
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    /// Check whether `flags` is contained in `self`.
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    pub fn contains(self, flags: Flags) -> bool {
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        (self & flags) == flags
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    }
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}
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impl core::ops::BitOr for Flags {
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    type Output = Self;
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    fn bitor(self, rhs: Self) -> Self::Output {
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        Self(self.0 | rhs.0)
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    }
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}
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impl core::ops::BitAnd for Flags {
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    type Output = Self;
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    fn bitand(self, rhs: Self) -> Self::Output {
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        Self(self.0 & rhs.0)
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    }
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}
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impl core::ops::Not for Flags {
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    type Output = Self;
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    fn not(self) -> Self::Output {
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        Self(!self.0)
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    }
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}
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/// Allocation flags.
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///
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/// These are meant to be used in functions that can allocate memory.
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pub mod flags {
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    use super::Flags;
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    /// Zeroes out the allocated memory.
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    ///
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    /// This is normally or'd with other flags.
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    pub const __GFP_ZERO: Flags = Flags(bindings::__GFP_ZERO);
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    /// Allow the allocation to be in high memory.
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    ///
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    /// Allocations in high memory may not be mapped into the kernel's address space, so this can't
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    /// be used with `kmalloc` and other similar methods.
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    ///
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    /// This is normally or'd with other flags.
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    pub const __GFP_HIGHMEM: Flags = Flags(bindings::__GFP_HIGHMEM);
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    /// Users can not sleep and need the allocation to succeed.
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    ///
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    /// A lower watermark is applied to allow access to "atomic reserves". The current
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    /// implementation doesn't support NMI and few other strict non-preemptive contexts (e.g.
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    /// raw_spin_lock). The same applies to [`GFP_NOWAIT`].
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    pub const GFP_ATOMIC: Flags = Flags(bindings::GFP_ATOMIC);
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    /// Typical for kernel-internal allocations. The caller requires ZONE_NORMAL or a lower zone
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    /// for direct access but can direct reclaim.
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    pub const GFP_KERNEL: Flags = Flags(bindings::GFP_KERNEL);
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    /// The same as [`GFP_KERNEL`], except the allocation is accounted to kmemcg.
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    pub const GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT: Flags = Flags(bindings::GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT);
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    /// For kernel allocations that should not stall for direct reclaim, start physical IO or
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    /// use any filesystem callback.  It is very likely to fail to allocate memory, even for very
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    /// small allocations.
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    pub const GFP_NOWAIT: Flags = Flags(bindings::GFP_NOWAIT);
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    /// Suppresses allocation failure reports.
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    ///
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    /// This is normally or'd with other flags.
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    pub const __GFP_NOWARN: Flags = Flags(bindings::__GFP_NOWARN);
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}
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/// The kernel's [`Allocator`] trait.
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///
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/// An implementation of [`Allocator`] can allocate, re-allocate and free memory buffers described
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/// via [`Layout`].
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///
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/// [`Allocator`] is designed to be implemented as a ZST; [`Allocator`] functions do not operate on
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/// an object instance.
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///
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/// In order to be able to support `#[derive(SmartPointer)]` later on, we need to avoid a design
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/// that requires an `Allocator` to be instantiated, hence its functions must not contain any kind
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/// of `self` parameter.
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// - A memory allocation returned from an allocator must remain valid until it is explicitly freed.
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///
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/// - Any pointer to a valid memory allocation must be valid to be passed to any other [`Allocator`]
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///   function of the same type.
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///
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/// - Implementers must ensure that all trait functions abide by the guarantees documented in the
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///   `# Guarantees` sections.
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pub unsafe trait Allocator {
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    /// Allocate memory based on `layout` and `flags`.
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    ///
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    /// On success, returns a buffer represented as `NonNull<[u8]>` that satisfies the layout
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    /// constraints (i.e. minimum size and alignment as specified by `layout`).
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    ///
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    /// This function is equivalent to `realloc` when called with `None`.
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    ///
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    /// # Guarantees
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    ///
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    /// When the return value is `Ok(ptr)`, then `ptr` is
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    /// - valid for reads and writes for `layout.size()` bytes, until it is passed to
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    ///   [`Allocator::free`] or [`Allocator::realloc`],
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    /// - aligned to `layout.align()`,
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    ///
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    /// Additionally, `Flags` are honored as documented in
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    /// <https://docs.kernel.org/core-api/mm-api.html#mm-api-gfp-flags>.
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    fn alloc(layout: Layout, flags: Flags) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
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        // SAFETY: Passing `None` to `realloc` is valid by its safety requirements and asks for a
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        // new memory allocation.
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        unsafe { Self::realloc(None, layout, Layout::new::<()>(), flags) }
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    }
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    /// Re-allocate an existing memory allocation to satisfy the requested `layout`.
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    ///
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    /// If the requested size is zero, `realloc` behaves equivalent to `free`.
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    ///
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    /// If the requested size is larger than the size of the existing allocation, a successful call
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    /// to `realloc` guarantees that the new or grown buffer has at least `Layout::size` bytes, but
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    /// may also be larger.
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    ///
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    /// If the requested size is smaller than the size of the existing allocation, `realloc` may or
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    /// may not shrink the buffer; this is implementation specific to the allocator.
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    ///
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    /// On allocation failure, the existing buffer, if any, remains valid.
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    ///
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    /// The buffer is represented as `NonNull<[u8]>`.
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    ///
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    /// # Safety
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    ///
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    /// - If `ptr == Some(p)`, then `p` must point to an existing and valid memory allocation
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    ///   created by this [`Allocator`]; if `old_layout` is zero-sized `p` does not need to be a
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    ///   pointer returned by this [`Allocator`].
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    /// - `ptr` is allowed to be `None`; in this case a new memory allocation is created and
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    ///   `old_layout` is ignored.
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    /// - `old_layout` must match the `Layout` the allocation has been created with.
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    ///
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    /// # Guarantees
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    ///
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    /// This function has the same guarantees as [`Allocator::alloc`]. When `ptr == Some(p)`, then
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    /// it additionally guarantees that:
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    /// - the contents of the memory pointed to by `p` are preserved up to the lesser of the new
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    ///   and old size, i.e. `ret_ptr[0..min(layout.size(), old_layout.size())] ==
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    ///   p[0..min(layout.size(), old_layout.size())]`.
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    /// - when the return value is `Err(AllocError)`, then `ptr` is still valid.
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    unsafe fn realloc(
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        ptr: Option<NonNull<u8>>,
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        layout: Layout,
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        old_layout: Layout,
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        flags: Flags,
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    ) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError>;
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    /// Free an existing memory allocation.
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    ///
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    /// # Safety
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    ///
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    /// - `ptr` must point to an existing and valid memory allocation created by this [`Allocator`];
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    ///   if `old_layout` is zero-sized `p` does not need to be a pointer returned by this
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    ///   [`Allocator`].
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    /// - `layout` must match the `Layout` the allocation has been created with.
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    /// - The memory allocation at `ptr` must never again be read from or written to.
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    unsafe fn free(ptr: NonNull<u8>, layout: Layout) {
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        // SAFETY: The caller guarantees that `ptr` points at a valid allocation created by this
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        // allocator. We are passing a `Layout` with the smallest possible alignment, so it is
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        // smaller than or equal to the alignment previously used with this allocation.
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        let _ = unsafe { Self::realloc(Some(ptr), Layout::new::<()>(), layout, Flags(0)) };
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    }
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}
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/// Returns a properly aligned dangling pointer from the given `layout`.
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pub(crate) fn dangling_from_layout(layout: Layout) -> NonNull<u8> {
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    let ptr = layout.align() as *mut u8;
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    // SAFETY: `layout.align()` (and hence `ptr`) is guaranteed to be non-zero.
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    unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr) }
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}
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