mirror of
https://github.com/torvalds/linux.git
synced 2025-11-01 09:09:47 +02:00
Here is the big set of char/misc/iio and other driver subsystem changes
for 6.18-rc1. Loads of different stuff in here, it was a busy
development cycle in lots of different subsystems, with over 27k new
lines added to the tree. Included in here are:
- IIO updates including new drivers, reworking of existing apis, and
other goodness in the sensor subsystems
- MEI driver updates and additions
- NVMEM driver updates
- slimbus removal for an unused driver and some other minor
updates
- coresight driver updates and additions
- MHI driver updates
- comedi driver updates and fixes
- extcon driver updates
- interconnect driver additions
- eeprom driver updates and fixes
- minor UIO driver updates
- tiny W1 driver updates
But the majority of new code is in the rust bindings and additions,
which includes:
- misc driver rust binding updates for read/write support, we can now
write "normal" misc drivers in rust fully, and the sample driver
shows how this can be done.
- Initial framework for USB driver rust bindings, which are disabled
for now in the build, due to limited support, but coming in through
this tree due to dependencies on other rust binding changes that
were in here. I'll be enabling these back on in the build in the
usb.git tree after -rc1 is out so that developers can continue to
work on these in linux-next over the next development cycle.
- Android Binder driver implemented in Rust. This is the big one, and
was driving a huge majority of the rust binding work over the past
years. Right now there are 2 binder drivers in the kernel, selected
only at build time as to which one to use as binder wants to be
included in the system at boot time. The binder C maintainers all
agreed on this, as eventually, they want the C code to be removed from
the tree, but it will take a few releases to get there while both
are maintained to ensure that the rust implementation is fully
stable and compliant with the existing userspace apis.
All of these have been in linux-next for a while, with only minor merge
issues showing up (you will hit them as well.) Just accept both sides
of the merge, it's just some header and include file lines, nothing
major.
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
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Merge tag 'char-misc-6.18-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc
Pull Char/Misc/IIO/Binder updates from Greg KH:
"Here is the big set of char/misc/iio and other driver subsystem
changes for 6.18-rc1.
Loads of different stuff in here, it was a busy development cycle in
lots of different subsystems, with over 27k new lines added to the
tree.
Included in here are:
- IIO updates including new drivers, reworking of existing apis, and
other goodness in the sensor subsystems
- MEI driver updates and additions
- NVMEM driver updates
- slimbus removal for an unused driver and some other minor updates
- coresight driver updates and additions
- MHI driver updates
- comedi driver updates and fixes
- extcon driver updates
- interconnect driver additions
- eeprom driver updates and fixes
- minor UIO driver updates
- tiny W1 driver updates
But the majority of new code is in the rust bindings and additions,
which includes:
- misc driver rust binding updates for read/write support, we can now
write "normal" misc drivers in rust fully, and the sample driver
shows how this can be done.
- Initial framework for USB driver rust bindings, which are disabled
for now in the build, due to limited support, but coming in through
this tree due to dependencies on other rust binding changes that
were in here. I'll be enabling these back on in the build in the
usb.git tree after -rc1 is out so that developers can continue to
work on these in linux-next over the next development cycle.
- Android Binder driver implemented in Rust.
This is the big one, and was driving a huge majority of the rust
binding work over the past years. Right now there are two binder
drivers in the kernel, selected only at build time as to which one
to use as binder wants to be included in the system at boot time.
The binder C maintainers all agreed on this, as eventually, they
want the C code to be removed from the tree, but it will take a few
releases to get there while both are maintained to ensure that the
rust implementation is fully stable and compliant with the existing
userspace apis.
All of these have been in linux-next for a while"
* tag 'char-misc-6.18-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc: (320 commits)
rust: usb: keep usb::Device private for now
rust: usb: don't retain device context for the interface parent
USB: disable rust bindings from the build for now
samples: rust: add a USB driver sample
rust: usb: add basic USB abstractions
coresight: Add label sysfs node support
dt-bindings: arm: Add label in the coresight components
coresight: tnoc: add new AMBA ID to support Trace Noc V2
coresight: Fix incorrect handling for return value of devm_kzalloc
coresight: tpda: fix the logic to setup the element size
coresight: trbe: Return NULL pointer for allocation failures
coresight: Refactor runtime PM
coresight: Make clock sequence consistent
coresight: Refactor driver data allocation
coresight: Consolidate clock enabling
coresight: Avoid enable programming clock duplicately
coresight: Appropriately disable trace bus clocks
coresight: Appropriately disable programming clocks
coresight: etm4x: Support atclk
coresight: catu: Support atclk
...
356 lines
9.8 KiB
Rust
356 lines
9.8 KiB
Rust
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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//! The `kernel` crate.
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//!
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//! This crate contains the kernel APIs that have been ported or wrapped for
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//! usage by Rust code in the kernel and is shared by all of them.
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//!
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//! In other words, all the rest of the Rust code in the kernel (e.g. kernel
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//! modules written in Rust) depends on [`core`] and this crate.
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//!
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//! If you need a kernel C API that is not ported or wrapped yet here, then
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//! do so first instead of bypassing this crate.
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#![no_std]
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//
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// Please see https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/2 for details on
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// the unstable features in use.
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//
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// Stable since Rust 1.79.0.
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#![feature(generic_nonzero)]
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#![feature(inline_const)]
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#![feature(pointer_is_aligned)]
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//
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// Stable since Rust 1.81.0.
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#![feature(lint_reasons)]
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//
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// Stable since Rust 1.82.0.
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#![feature(raw_ref_op)]
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//
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// Stable since Rust 1.83.0.
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#![feature(const_maybe_uninit_as_mut_ptr)]
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#![feature(const_mut_refs)]
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#![feature(const_option)]
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#![feature(const_ptr_write)]
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#![feature(const_refs_to_cell)]
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//
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// Expected to become stable.
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#![feature(arbitrary_self_types)]
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//
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// To be determined.
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#![feature(used_with_arg)]
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//
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// `feature(derive_coerce_pointee)` is expected to become stable. Before Rust
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// 1.84.0, it did not exist, so enable the predecessor features.
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#![cfg_attr(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_COERCE_POINTEE, feature(derive_coerce_pointee))]
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#![cfg_attr(not(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_COERCE_POINTEE), feature(coerce_unsized))]
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#![cfg_attr(not(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_COERCE_POINTEE), feature(dispatch_from_dyn))]
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#![cfg_attr(not(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_COERCE_POINTEE), feature(unsize))]
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//
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// `feature(file_with_nul)` is expected to become stable. Before Rust 1.89.0, it did not exist, so
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// enable it conditionally.
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#![cfg_attr(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_WITH_NUL, feature(file_with_nul))]
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// Ensure conditional compilation based on the kernel configuration works;
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// otherwise we may silently break things like initcall handling.
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#[cfg(not(CONFIG_RUST))]
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compile_error!("Missing kernel configuration for conditional compilation");
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// Allow proc-macros to refer to `::kernel` inside the `kernel` crate (this crate).
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extern crate self as kernel;
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pub use ffi;
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pub mod acpi;
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pub mod alloc;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_AUXILIARY_BUS)]
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pub mod auxiliary;
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pub mod bitmap;
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pub mod bits;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_BLOCK)]
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pub mod block;
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pub mod bug;
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#[doc(hidden)]
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pub mod build_assert;
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pub mod clk;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_CONFIGFS_FS)]
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pub mod configfs;
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pub mod cpu;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_CPU_FREQ)]
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pub mod cpufreq;
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pub mod cpumask;
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pub mod cred;
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pub mod debugfs;
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pub mod device;
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pub mod device_id;
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pub mod devres;
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pub mod dma;
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pub mod driver;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_DRM = "y")]
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pub mod drm;
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pub mod error;
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pub mod faux;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_RUST_FW_LOADER_ABSTRACTIONS)]
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pub mod firmware;
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pub mod fmt;
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pub mod fs;
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pub mod id_pool;
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pub mod init;
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pub mod io;
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pub mod ioctl;
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pub mod iov;
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pub mod irq;
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pub mod jump_label;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_KUNIT)]
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pub mod kunit;
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pub mod list;
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pub mod maple_tree;
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pub mod miscdevice;
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pub mod mm;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_NET)]
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pub mod net;
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pub mod of;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_PM_OPP)]
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pub mod opp;
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pub mod page;
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#[cfg(CONFIG_PCI)]
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pub mod pci;
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pub mod pid_namespace;
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pub mod platform;
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pub mod prelude;
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pub mod print;
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pub mod processor;
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pub mod ptr;
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pub mod rbtree;
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pub mod regulator;
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pub mod revocable;
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pub mod scatterlist;
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pub mod security;
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pub mod seq_file;
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pub mod sizes;
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mod static_assert;
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#[doc(hidden)]
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pub mod std_vendor;
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pub mod str;
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pub mod sync;
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pub mod task;
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pub mod time;
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pub mod tracepoint;
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pub mod transmute;
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pub mod types;
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pub mod uaccess;
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pub mod workqueue;
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pub mod xarray;
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#[doc(hidden)]
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pub use bindings;
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pub use macros;
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pub use uapi;
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/// Prefix to appear before log messages printed from within the `kernel` crate.
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const __LOG_PREFIX: &[u8] = b"rust_kernel\0";
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/// The top level entrypoint to implementing a kernel module.
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///
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/// For any teardown or cleanup operations, your type may implement [`Drop`].
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pub trait Module: Sized + Sync + Send {
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/// Called at module initialization time.
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///
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/// Use this method to perform whatever setup or registration your module
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/// should do.
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///
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/// Equivalent to the `module_init` macro in the C API.
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fn init(module: &'static ThisModule) -> error::Result<Self>;
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}
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/// A module that is pinned and initialised in-place.
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pub trait InPlaceModule: Sync + Send {
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/// Creates an initialiser for the module.
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///
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/// It is called when the module is loaded.
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fn init(module: &'static ThisModule) -> impl pin_init::PinInit<Self, error::Error>;
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}
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impl<T: Module> InPlaceModule for T {
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fn init(module: &'static ThisModule) -> impl pin_init::PinInit<Self, error::Error> {
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let initer = move |slot: *mut Self| {
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let m = <Self as Module>::init(module)?;
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// SAFETY: `slot` is valid for write per the contract with `pin_init_from_closure`.
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unsafe { slot.write(m) };
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Ok(())
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};
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// SAFETY: On success, `initer` always fully initialises an instance of `Self`.
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unsafe { pin_init::pin_init_from_closure(initer) }
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}
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}
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/// Metadata attached to a [`Module`] or [`InPlaceModule`].
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pub trait ModuleMetadata {
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/// The name of the module as specified in the `module!` macro.
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const NAME: &'static crate::str::CStr;
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}
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/// Equivalent to `THIS_MODULE` in the C API.
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///
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/// C header: [`include/linux/init.h`](srctree/include/linux/init.h)
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pub struct ThisModule(*mut bindings::module);
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// SAFETY: `THIS_MODULE` may be used from all threads within a module.
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unsafe impl Sync for ThisModule {}
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impl ThisModule {
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/// Creates a [`ThisModule`] given the `THIS_MODULE` pointer.
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// The pointer must be equal to the right `THIS_MODULE`.
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pub const unsafe fn from_ptr(ptr: *mut bindings::module) -> ThisModule {
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ThisModule(ptr)
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}
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/// Access the raw pointer for this module.
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///
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/// It is up to the user to use it correctly.
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pub const fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut bindings::module {
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self.0
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}
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}
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#[cfg(not(testlib))]
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#[panic_handler]
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fn panic(info: &core::panic::PanicInfo<'_>) -> ! {
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pr_emerg!("{}\n", info);
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// SAFETY: FFI call.
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unsafe { bindings::BUG() };
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}
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/// Produces a pointer to an object from a pointer to one of its fields.
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///
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/// If you encounter a type mismatch due to the [`Opaque`] type, then use [`Opaque::cast_into`] or
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/// [`Opaque::cast_from`] to resolve the mismatch.
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///
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/// [`Opaque`]: crate::types::Opaque
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/// [`Opaque::cast_into`]: crate::types::Opaque::cast_into
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/// [`Opaque::cast_from`]: crate::types::Opaque::cast_from
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// The pointer passed to this macro, and the pointer returned by this macro, must both be in
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/// bounds of the same allocation.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// ```
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/// # use kernel::container_of;
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/// struct Test {
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/// a: u64,
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/// b: u32,
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/// }
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///
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/// let test = Test { a: 10, b: 20 };
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/// let b_ptr: *const _ = &test.b;
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/// // SAFETY: The pointer points at the `b` field of a `Test`, so the resulting pointer will be
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/// // in-bounds of the same allocation as `b_ptr`.
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/// let test_alias = unsafe { container_of!(b_ptr, Test, b) };
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/// assert!(core::ptr::eq(&test, test_alias));
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/// ```
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#[macro_export]
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macro_rules! container_of {
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($field_ptr:expr, $Container:ty, $($fields:tt)*) => {{
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let offset: usize = ::core::mem::offset_of!($Container, $($fields)*);
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let field_ptr = $field_ptr;
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let container_ptr = field_ptr.byte_sub(offset).cast::<$Container>();
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$crate::assert_same_type(field_ptr, (&raw const (*container_ptr).$($fields)*).cast_mut());
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container_ptr
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}}
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}
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/// Helper for [`container_of!`].
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#[doc(hidden)]
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pub fn assert_same_type<T>(_: T, _: T) {}
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/// Helper for `.rs.S` files.
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#[doc(hidden)]
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#[macro_export]
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macro_rules! concat_literals {
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($( $asm:literal )* ) => {
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::core::concat!($($asm),*)
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};
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}
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/// Wrapper around `asm!` configured for use in the kernel.
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///
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/// Uses a semicolon to avoid parsing ambiguities, even though this does not match native `asm!`
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/// syntax.
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// For x86, `asm!` uses intel syntax by default, but we want to use at&t syntax in the kernel.
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#[cfg(any(target_arch = "x86", target_arch = "x86_64"))]
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#[macro_export]
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macro_rules! asm {
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($($asm:expr),* ; $($rest:tt)*) => {
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::core::arch::asm!( $($asm)*, options(att_syntax), $($rest)* )
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};
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}
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/// Wrapper around `asm!` configured for use in the kernel.
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///
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/// Uses a semicolon to avoid parsing ambiguities, even though this does not match native `asm!`
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/// syntax.
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// For non-x86 arches we just pass through to `asm!`.
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#[cfg(not(any(target_arch = "x86", target_arch = "x86_64")))]
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#[macro_export]
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macro_rules! asm {
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($($asm:expr),* ; $($rest:tt)*) => {
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::core::arch::asm!( $($asm)*, $($rest)* )
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};
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}
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/// Gets the C string file name of a [`Location`].
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///
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/// If `Location::file_as_c_str()` is not available, returns a string that warns about it.
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///
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/// [`Location`]: core::panic::Location
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// ```
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/// # use kernel::file_from_location;
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///
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/// #[track_caller]
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/// fn foo() {
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/// let caller = core::panic::Location::caller();
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///
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/// // Output:
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/// // - A path like "rust/kernel/example.rs" if `file_as_c_str()` is available.
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/// // - "<Location::file_as_c_str() not supported>" otherwise.
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/// let caller_file = file_from_location(caller);
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///
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/// // Prints out the message with caller's file name.
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/// pr_info!("foo() called in file {caller_file:?}\n");
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///
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/// # if cfg!(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_WITH_NUL) {
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/// # assert_eq!(Ok(caller.file()), caller_file.to_str());
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/// # }
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/// }
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///
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/// # foo();
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/// ```
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#[inline]
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pub fn file_from_location<'a>(loc: &'a core::panic::Location<'a>) -> &'a core::ffi::CStr {
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#[cfg(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_AS_C_STR)]
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{
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loc.file_as_c_str()
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}
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#[cfg(all(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_WITH_NUL, not(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_AS_C_STR)))]
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{
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loc.file_with_nul()
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}
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#[cfg(not(CONFIG_RUSTC_HAS_FILE_WITH_NUL))]
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{
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let _ = loc;
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c"<Location::file_as_c_str() not supported>"
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}
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}
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