linux-stable/include/linux/cleanup.h
Ingo Molnar b4d83c8323 headers/cleanup.h: Remove the if_not_guard() facility
Linus noticed that the new if_not_guard() definition is fragile:

   "This macro generates actively wrong code if it happens to be inside an
    if-statement or a loop without a block.

    IOW, code like this:

      for (iterate-over-something)
          if_not_guard(a)
              return -BUSY;

    looks like will build fine, but will generate completely incorrect code."

The reason is that the __if_not_guard() macro is multi-statement, so
while most kernel developers expect macros to be simple or at least
compound statements - but for __if_not_guard() it is not so:

 #define __if_not_guard(_name, _id, args...)            \
        BUILD_BUG_ON(!__is_cond_ptr(_name));            \
        CLASS(_name, _id)(args);                        \
        if (!__guard_ptr(_name)(&_id))

To add insult to injury, the placement of the BUILD_BUG_ON() line makes
the macro appear to compile fine, but it will generate incorrect code
as Linus reported, for example if used within iteration or conditional
statements that will use the first statement of a macro as a loop body
or conditional statement body.

[ I'd also like to note that the original submission by David Lechner did
  not contain the BUILD_BUG_ON() line, so it was safer than what we ended
  up committing. Mea culpa. ]

It doesn't appear to be possible to turn this macro into a robust
single or compound statement that could be used in single statements,
due to the necessity to define an auto scope variable with an open
scope and the necessity of it having to expand to a partial 'if'
statement with no body.

Instead of trying to work around this fragility, just remove the
construct before it gets used.

Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Cc: David Lechner <dlechner@baylibre.com>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/Z1LBnX9TpZLR5Dkf@gmail.com
2024-12-07 11:15:14 +01:00

423 lines
13 KiB
C

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
#ifndef _LINUX_CLEANUP_H
#define _LINUX_CLEANUP_H
#include <linux/compiler.h>
/**
* DOC: scope-based cleanup helpers
*
* The "goto error" pattern is notorious for introducing subtle resource
* leaks. It is tedious and error prone to add new resource acquisition
* constraints into code paths that already have several unwind
* conditions. The "cleanup" helpers enable the compiler to help with
* this tedium and can aid in maintaining LIFO (last in first out)
* unwind ordering to avoid unintentional leaks.
*
* As drivers make up the majority of the kernel code base, here is an
* example of using these helpers to clean up PCI drivers. The target of
* the cleanups are occasions where a goto is used to unwind a device
* reference (pci_dev_put()), or unlock the device (pci_dev_unlock())
* before returning.
*
* The DEFINE_FREE() macro can arrange for PCI device references to be
* dropped when the associated variable goes out of scope::
*
* DEFINE_FREE(pci_dev_put, struct pci_dev *, if (_T) pci_dev_put(_T))
* ...
* struct pci_dev *dev __free(pci_dev_put) =
* pci_get_slot(parent, PCI_DEVFN(0, 0));
*
* The above will automatically call pci_dev_put() if @dev is non-NULL
* when @dev goes out of scope (automatic variable scope). If a function
* wants to invoke pci_dev_put() on error, but return @dev (i.e. without
* freeing it) on success, it can do::
*
* return no_free_ptr(dev);
*
* ...or::
*
* return_ptr(dev);
*
* The DEFINE_GUARD() macro can arrange for the PCI device lock to be
* dropped when the scope where guard() is invoked ends::
*
* DEFINE_GUARD(pci_dev, struct pci_dev *, pci_dev_lock(_T), pci_dev_unlock(_T))
* ...
* guard(pci_dev)(dev);
*
* The lifetime of the lock obtained by the guard() helper follows the
* scope of automatic variable declaration. Take the following example::
*
* func(...)
* {
* if (...) {
* ...
* guard(pci_dev)(dev); // pci_dev_lock() invoked here
* ...
* } // <- implied pci_dev_unlock() triggered here
* }
*
* Observe the lock is held for the remainder of the "if ()" block not
* the remainder of "func()".
*
* Now, when a function uses both __free() and guard(), or multiple
* instances of __free(), the LIFO order of variable definition order
* matters. GCC documentation says:
*
* "When multiple variables in the same scope have cleanup attributes,
* at exit from the scope their associated cleanup functions are run in
* reverse order of definition (last defined, first cleanup)."
*
* When the unwind order matters it requires that variables be defined
* mid-function scope rather than at the top of the file. Take the
* following example and notice the bug highlighted by "!!"::
*
* LIST_HEAD(list);
* DEFINE_MUTEX(lock);
*
* struct object {
* struct list_head node;
* };
*
* static struct object *alloc_add(void)
* {
* struct object *obj;
*
* lockdep_assert_held(&lock);
* obj = kzalloc(sizeof(*obj), GFP_KERNEL);
* if (obj) {
* LIST_HEAD_INIT(&obj->node);
* list_add(obj->node, &list):
* }
* return obj;
* }
*
* static void remove_free(struct object *obj)
* {
* lockdep_assert_held(&lock);
* list_del(&obj->node);
* kfree(obj);
* }
*
* DEFINE_FREE(remove_free, struct object *, if (_T) remove_free(_T))
* static int init(void)
* {
* struct object *obj __free(remove_free) = NULL;
* int err;
*
* guard(mutex)(&lock);
* obj = alloc_add();
*
* if (!obj)
* return -ENOMEM;
*
* err = other_init(obj);
* if (err)
* return err; // remove_free() called without the lock!!
*
* no_free_ptr(obj);
* return 0;
* }
*
* That bug is fixed by changing init() to call guard() and define +
* initialize @obj in this order::
*
* guard(mutex)(&lock);
* struct object *obj __free(remove_free) = alloc_add();
*
* Given that the "__free(...) = NULL" pattern for variables defined at
* the top of the function poses this potential interdependency problem
* the recommendation is to always define and assign variables in one
* statement and not group variable definitions at the top of the
* function when __free() is used.
*
* Lastly, given that the benefit of cleanup helpers is removal of
* "goto", and that the "goto" statement can jump between scopes, the
* expectation is that usage of "goto" and cleanup helpers is never
* mixed in the same function. I.e. for a given routine, convert all
* resources that need a "goto" cleanup to scope-based cleanup, or
* convert none of them.
*/
/*
* DEFINE_FREE(name, type, free):
* simple helper macro that defines the required wrapper for a __free()
* based cleanup function. @free is an expression using '_T' to access the
* variable. @free should typically include a NULL test before calling a
* function, see the example below.
*
* __free(name):
* variable attribute to add a scoped based cleanup to the variable.
*
* no_free_ptr(var):
* like a non-atomic xchg(var, NULL), such that the cleanup function will
* be inhibited -- provided it sanely deals with a NULL value.
*
* NOTE: this has __must_check semantics so that it is harder to accidentally
* leak the resource.
*
* return_ptr(p):
* returns p while inhibiting the __free().
*
* Ex.
*
* DEFINE_FREE(kfree, void *, if (_T) kfree(_T))
*
* void *alloc_obj(...)
* {
* struct obj *p __free(kfree) = kmalloc(...);
* if (!p)
* return NULL;
*
* if (!init_obj(p))
* return NULL;
*
* return_ptr(p);
* }
*
* NOTE: the DEFINE_FREE()'s @free expression includes a NULL test even though
* kfree() is fine to be called with a NULL value. This is on purpose. This way
* the compiler sees the end of our alloc_obj() function as:
*
* tmp = p;
* p = NULL;
* if (p)
* kfree(p);
* return tmp;
*
* And through the magic of value-propagation and dead-code-elimination, it
* eliminates the actual cleanup call and compiles into:
*
* return p;
*
* Without the NULL test it turns into a mess and the compiler can't help us.
*/
#define DEFINE_FREE(_name, _type, _free) \
static inline void __free_##_name(void *p) { _type _T = *(_type *)p; _free; }
#define __free(_name) __cleanup(__free_##_name)
#define __get_and_null(p, nullvalue) \
({ \
__auto_type __ptr = &(p); \
__auto_type __val = *__ptr; \
*__ptr = nullvalue; \
__val; \
})
static inline __must_check
const volatile void * __must_check_fn(const volatile void *val)
{ return val; }
#define no_free_ptr(p) \
((typeof(p)) __must_check_fn(__get_and_null(p, NULL)))
#define return_ptr(p) return no_free_ptr(p)
/*
* DEFINE_CLASS(name, type, exit, init, init_args...):
* helper to define the destructor and constructor for a type.
* @exit is an expression using '_T' -- similar to FREE above.
* @init is an expression in @init_args resulting in @type
*
* EXTEND_CLASS(name, ext, init, init_args...):
* extends class @name to @name@ext with the new constructor
*
* CLASS(name, var)(args...):
* declare the variable @var as an instance of the named class
*
* Ex.
*
* DEFINE_CLASS(fdget, struct fd, fdput(_T), fdget(fd), int fd)
*
* CLASS(fdget, f)(fd);
* if (fd_empty(f))
* return -EBADF;
*
* // use 'f' without concern
*/
#define DEFINE_CLASS(_name, _type, _exit, _init, _init_args...) \
typedef _type class_##_name##_t; \
static inline void class_##_name##_destructor(_type *p) \
{ _type _T = *p; _exit; } \
static inline _type class_##_name##_constructor(_init_args) \
{ _type t = _init; return t; }
#define EXTEND_CLASS(_name, ext, _init, _init_args...) \
typedef class_##_name##_t class_##_name##ext##_t; \
static inline void class_##_name##ext##_destructor(class_##_name##_t *p)\
{ class_##_name##_destructor(p); } \
static inline class_##_name##_t class_##_name##ext##_constructor(_init_args) \
{ class_##_name##_t t = _init; return t; }
#define CLASS(_name, var) \
class_##_name##_t var __cleanup(class_##_name##_destructor) = \
class_##_name##_constructor
/*
* DEFINE_GUARD(name, type, lock, unlock):
* trivial wrapper around DEFINE_CLASS() above specifically
* for locks.
*
* DEFINE_GUARD_COND(name, ext, condlock)
* wrapper around EXTEND_CLASS above to add conditional lock
* variants to a base class, eg. mutex_trylock() or
* mutex_lock_interruptible().
*
* guard(name):
* an anonymous instance of the (guard) class, not recommended for
* conditional locks.
*
* scoped_guard (name, args...) { }:
* similar to CLASS(name, scope)(args), except the variable (with the
* explicit name 'scope') is declard in a for-loop such that its scope is
* bound to the next (compound) statement.
*
* for conditional locks the loop body is skipped when the lock is not
* acquired.
*
* scoped_cond_guard (name, fail, args...) { }:
* similar to scoped_guard(), except it does fail when the lock
* acquire fails.
*
* Only for conditional locks.
*/
#define __DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name, _is_cond) \
static __maybe_unused const bool class_##_name##_is_conditional = _is_cond
#define DEFINE_GUARD(_name, _type, _lock, _unlock) \
__DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name, false); \
DEFINE_CLASS(_name, _type, if (_T) { _unlock; }, ({ _lock; _T; }), _type _T); \
static inline void * class_##_name##_lock_ptr(class_##_name##_t *_T) \
{ return (void *)(__force unsigned long)*_T; }
#define DEFINE_GUARD_COND(_name, _ext, _condlock) \
__DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name##_ext, true); \
EXTEND_CLASS(_name, _ext, \
({ void *_t = _T; if (_T && !(_condlock)) _t = NULL; _t; }), \
class_##_name##_t _T) \
static inline void * class_##_name##_ext##_lock_ptr(class_##_name##_t *_T) \
{ return class_##_name##_lock_ptr(_T); }
#define guard(_name) \
CLASS(_name, __UNIQUE_ID(guard))
#define __guard_ptr(_name) class_##_name##_lock_ptr
#define __is_cond_ptr(_name) class_##_name##_is_conditional
/*
* Helper macro for scoped_guard().
*
* Note that the "!__is_cond_ptr(_name)" part of the condition ensures that
* compiler would be sure that for the unconditional locks the body of the
* loop (caller-provided code glued to the else clause) could not be skipped.
* It is needed because the other part - "__guard_ptr(_name)(&scope)" - is too
* hard to deduce (even if could be proven true for unconditional locks).
*/
#define __scoped_guard(_name, _label, args...) \
for (CLASS(_name, scope)(args); \
__guard_ptr(_name)(&scope) || !__is_cond_ptr(_name); \
({ goto _label; })) \
if (0) { \
_label: \
break; \
} else
#define scoped_guard(_name, args...) \
__scoped_guard(_name, __UNIQUE_ID(label), args)
#define __scoped_cond_guard(_name, _fail, _label, args...) \
for (CLASS(_name, scope)(args); true; ({ goto _label; })) \
if (!__guard_ptr(_name)(&scope)) { \
BUILD_BUG_ON(!__is_cond_ptr(_name)); \
_fail; \
_label: \
break; \
} else
#define scoped_cond_guard(_name, _fail, args...) \
__scoped_cond_guard(_name, _fail, __UNIQUE_ID(label), args)
/*
* Additional helper macros for generating lock guards with types, either for
* locks that don't have a native type (eg. RCU, preempt) or those that need a
* 'fat' pointer (eg. spin_lock_irqsave).
*
* DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_0(name, lock, unlock, ...)
* DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1(name, type, lock, unlock, ...)
* DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1_COND(name, ext, condlock)
*
* will result in the following type:
*
* typedef struct {
* type *lock; // 'type := void' for the _0 variant
* __VA_ARGS__;
* } class_##name##_t;
*
* As above, both _lock and _unlock are statements, except this time '_T' will
* be a pointer to the above struct.
*/
#define __DEFINE_UNLOCK_GUARD(_name, _type, _unlock, ...) \
typedef struct { \
_type *lock; \
__VA_ARGS__; \
} class_##_name##_t; \
\
static inline void class_##_name##_destructor(class_##_name##_t *_T) \
{ \
if (_T->lock) { _unlock; } \
} \
\
static inline void *class_##_name##_lock_ptr(class_##_name##_t *_T) \
{ \
return (void *)(__force unsigned long)_T->lock; \
}
#define __DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1(_name, _type, _lock) \
static inline class_##_name##_t class_##_name##_constructor(_type *l) \
{ \
class_##_name##_t _t = { .lock = l }, *_T = &_t; \
_lock; \
return _t; \
}
#define __DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_0(_name, _lock) \
static inline class_##_name##_t class_##_name##_constructor(void) \
{ \
class_##_name##_t _t = { .lock = (void*)1 }, \
*_T __maybe_unused = &_t; \
_lock; \
return _t; \
}
#define DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1(_name, _type, _lock, _unlock, ...) \
__DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name, false); \
__DEFINE_UNLOCK_GUARD(_name, _type, _unlock, __VA_ARGS__) \
__DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1(_name, _type, _lock)
#define DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_0(_name, _lock, _unlock, ...) \
__DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name, false); \
__DEFINE_UNLOCK_GUARD(_name, void, _unlock, __VA_ARGS__) \
__DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_0(_name, _lock)
#define DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD_1_COND(_name, _ext, _condlock) \
__DEFINE_CLASS_IS_CONDITIONAL(_name##_ext, true); \
EXTEND_CLASS(_name, _ext, \
({ class_##_name##_t _t = { .lock = l }, *_T = &_t;\
if (_T->lock && !(_condlock)) _T->lock = NULL; \
_t; }), \
typeof_member(class_##_name##_t, lock) l) \
static inline void * class_##_name##_ext##_lock_ptr(class_##_name##_t *_T) \
{ return class_##_name##_lock_ptr(_T); }
#endif /* _LINUX_CLEANUP_H */