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https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/stable/linux.git
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6e86292f21
This is a useful for helper for working with indices into buffers that
consist of several pages. I forgot to include it when I added PAGE_SIZE
and PAGE_MASK for the same purpose in commit fc6e66f469
("rust: add
abstraction for `struct page`").
Reviewed-by: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241016-page-align-v2-1-e0afe85fc4b4@google.com
[ Added intra-doc links, formatted comment and replaced "Brackets" with
"Parentheses" as discussed in the list. - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
261 lines
11 KiB
Rust
261 lines
11 KiB
Rust
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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//! Kernel page allocation and management.
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use crate::{
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alloc::{AllocError, Flags},
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bindings,
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error::code::*,
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error::Result,
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uaccess::UserSliceReader,
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};
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use core::ptr::{self, NonNull};
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/// A bitwise shift for the page size.
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pub const PAGE_SHIFT: usize = bindings::PAGE_SHIFT as usize;
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/// The number of bytes in a page.
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pub const PAGE_SIZE: usize = bindings::PAGE_SIZE;
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/// A bitmask that gives the page containing a given address.
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pub const PAGE_MASK: usize = !(PAGE_SIZE - 1);
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/// Round up the given number to the next multiple of [`PAGE_SIZE`].
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///
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/// It is incorrect to pass an address where the next multiple of [`PAGE_SIZE`] doesn't fit in a
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/// [`usize`].
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pub const fn page_align(addr: usize) -> usize {
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// Parentheses around `PAGE_SIZE - 1` to avoid triggering overflow sanitizers in the wrong
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// cases.
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(addr + (PAGE_SIZE - 1)) & PAGE_MASK
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}
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/// A pointer to a page that owns the page allocation.
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///
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/// # Invariants
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///
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/// The pointer is valid, and has ownership over the page.
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pub struct Page {
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page: NonNull<bindings::page>,
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}
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// SAFETY: Pages have no logic that relies on them staying on a given thread, so moving them across
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// threads is safe.
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unsafe impl Send for Page {}
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// SAFETY: Pages have no logic that relies on them not being accessed concurrently, so accessing
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// them concurrently is safe.
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unsafe impl Sync for Page {}
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impl Page {
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/// Allocates a new page.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// Allocate memory for a page.
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///
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/// ```
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/// use kernel::page::Page;
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///
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/// # fn dox() -> Result<(), kernel::alloc::AllocError> {
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/// let page = Page::alloc_page(GFP_KERNEL)?;
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/// # Ok(()) }
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/// ```
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///
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/// Allocate memory for a page and zero its contents.
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///
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/// ```
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/// use kernel::page::Page;
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///
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/// # fn dox() -> Result<(), kernel::alloc::AllocError> {
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/// let page = Page::alloc_page(GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_ZERO)?;
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/// # Ok(()) }
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/// ```
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pub fn alloc_page(flags: Flags) -> Result<Self, AllocError> {
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// SAFETY: Depending on the value of `gfp_flags`, this call may sleep. Other than that, it
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// is always safe to call this method.
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let page = unsafe { bindings::alloc_pages(flags.as_raw(), 0) };
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let page = NonNull::new(page).ok_or(AllocError)?;
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// INVARIANT: We just successfully allocated a page, so we now have ownership of the newly
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// allocated page. We transfer that ownership to the new `Page` object.
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Ok(Self { page })
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}
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/// Returns a raw pointer to the page.
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pub fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut bindings::page {
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self.page.as_ptr()
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}
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/// Runs a piece of code with this page mapped to an address.
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///
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/// The page is unmapped when this call returns.
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///
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/// # Using the raw pointer
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///
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/// It is up to the caller to use the provided raw pointer correctly. The pointer is valid for
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/// `PAGE_SIZE` bytes and for the duration in which the closure is called. The pointer might
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/// only be mapped on the current thread, and when that is the case, dereferencing it on other
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/// threads is UB. Other than that, the usual rules for dereferencing a raw pointer apply: don't
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/// cause data races, the memory may be uninitialized, and so on.
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///
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/// If multiple threads map the same page at the same time, then they may reference with
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/// different addresses. However, even if the addresses are different, the underlying memory is
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/// still the same for these purposes (e.g., it's still a data race if they both write to the
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/// same underlying byte at the same time).
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fn with_page_mapped<T>(&self, f: impl FnOnce(*mut u8) -> T) -> T {
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// SAFETY: `page` is valid due to the type invariants on `Page`.
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let mapped_addr = unsafe { bindings::kmap_local_page(self.as_ptr()) };
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let res = f(mapped_addr.cast());
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// This unmaps the page mapped above.
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//
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// SAFETY: Since this API takes the user code as a closure, it can only be used in a manner
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// where the pages are unmapped in reverse order. This is as required by `kunmap_local`.
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//
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// In other words, if this call to `kunmap_local` happens when a different page should be
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// unmapped first, then there must necessarily be a call to `kmap_local_page` other than the
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// call just above in `with_page_mapped` that made that possible. In this case, it is the
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// unsafe block that wraps that other call that is incorrect.
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unsafe { bindings::kunmap_local(mapped_addr) };
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res
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}
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/// Runs a piece of code with a raw pointer to a slice of this page, with bounds checking.
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///
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/// If `f` is called, then it will be called with a pointer that points at `off` bytes into the
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/// page, and the pointer will be valid for at least `len` bytes. The pointer is only valid on
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/// this task, as this method uses a local mapping.
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///
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/// If `off` and `len` refers to a region outside of this page, then this method returns
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/// [`EINVAL`] and does not call `f`.
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///
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/// # Using the raw pointer
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///
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/// It is up to the caller to use the provided raw pointer correctly. The pointer is valid for
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/// `len` bytes and for the duration in which the closure is called. The pointer might only be
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/// mapped on the current thread, and when that is the case, dereferencing it on other threads
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/// is UB. Other than that, the usual rules for dereferencing a raw pointer apply: don't cause
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/// data races, the memory may be uninitialized, and so on.
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///
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/// If multiple threads map the same page at the same time, then they may reference with
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/// different addresses. However, even if the addresses are different, the underlying memory is
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/// still the same for these purposes (e.g., it's still a data race if they both write to the
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/// same underlying byte at the same time).
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fn with_pointer_into_page<T>(
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&self,
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off: usize,
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len: usize,
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f: impl FnOnce(*mut u8) -> Result<T>,
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) -> Result<T> {
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let bounds_ok = off <= PAGE_SIZE && len <= PAGE_SIZE && (off + len) <= PAGE_SIZE;
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if bounds_ok {
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self.with_page_mapped(move |page_addr| {
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// SAFETY: The `off` integer is at most `PAGE_SIZE`, so this pointer offset will
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// result in a pointer that is in bounds or one off the end of the page.
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f(unsafe { page_addr.add(off) })
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})
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} else {
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Err(EINVAL)
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}
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}
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/// Maps the page and reads from it into the given buffer.
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///
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/// This method will perform bounds checks on the page offset. If `offset .. offset+len` goes
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/// outside of the page, then this call returns [`EINVAL`].
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// * Callers must ensure that `dst` is valid for writing `len` bytes.
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/// * Callers must ensure that this call does not race with a write to the same page that
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/// overlaps with this read.
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pub unsafe fn read_raw(&self, dst: *mut u8, offset: usize, len: usize) -> Result {
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self.with_pointer_into_page(offset, len, move |src| {
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// SAFETY: If `with_pointer_into_page` calls into this closure, then
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// it has performed a bounds check and guarantees that `src` is
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// valid for `len` bytes.
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//
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// There caller guarantees that there is no data race.
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unsafe { ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src, dst, len) };
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Ok(())
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})
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}
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/// Maps the page and writes into it from the given buffer.
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///
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/// This method will perform bounds checks on the page offset. If `offset .. offset+len` goes
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/// outside of the page, then this call returns [`EINVAL`].
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// * Callers must ensure that `src` is valid for reading `len` bytes.
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/// * Callers must ensure that this call does not race with a read or write to the same page
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/// that overlaps with this write.
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pub unsafe fn write_raw(&self, src: *const u8, offset: usize, len: usize) -> Result {
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self.with_pointer_into_page(offset, len, move |dst| {
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// SAFETY: If `with_pointer_into_page` calls into this closure, then it has performed a
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// bounds check and guarantees that `dst` is valid for `len` bytes.
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//
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// There caller guarantees that there is no data race.
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unsafe { ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(src, dst, len) };
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Ok(())
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})
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}
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/// Maps the page and zeroes the given slice.
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///
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/// This method will perform bounds checks on the page offset. If `offset .. offset+len` goes
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/// outside of the page, then this call returns [`EINVAL`].
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// Callers must ensure that this call does not race with a read or write to the same page that
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/// overlaps with this write.
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pub unsafe fn fill_zero_raw(&self, offset: usize, len: usize) -> Result {
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self.with_pointer_into_page(offset, len, move |dst| {
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// SAFETY: If `with_pointer_into_page` calls into this closure, then it has performed a
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// bounds check and guarantees that `dst` is valid for `len` bytes.
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//
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// There caller guarantees that there is no data race.
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unsafe { ptr::write_bytes(dst, 0u8, len) };
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Ok(())
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})
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}
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/// Copies data from userspace into this page.
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///
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/// This method will perform bounds checks on the page offset. If `offset .. offset+len` goes
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/// outside of the page, then this call returns [`EINVAL`].
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///
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/// Like the other `UserSliceReader` methods, data races are allowed on the userspace address.
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/// However, they are not allowed on the page you are copying into.
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///
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/// # Safety
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///
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/// Callers must ensure that this call does not race with a read or write to the same page that
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/// overlaps with this write.
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pub unsafe fn copy_from_user_slice_raw(
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&self,
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reader: &mut UserSliceReader,
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offset: usize,
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len: usize,
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) -> Result {
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self.with_pointer_into_page(offset, len, move |dst| {
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// SAFETY: If `with_pointer_into_page` calls into this closure, then it has performed a
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// bounds check and guarantees that `dst` is valid for `len` bytes. Furthermore, we have
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// exclusive access to the slice since the caller guarantees that there are no races.
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reader.read_raw(unsafe { core::slice::from_raw_parts_mut(dst.cast(), len) })
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})
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}
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}
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impl Drop for Page {
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fn drop(&mut self) {
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// SAFETY: By the type invariants, we have ownership of the page and can free it.
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unsafe { bindings::__free_pages(self.page.as_ptr(), 0) };
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}
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}
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