// Copyright 2023 The Fuchsia Authors // // Licensed under a BSD-style license , Apache License, Version 2.0 // , or the MIT // license , at your option. // This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed except according to // those terms. #[path = "third_party/rust/layout.rs"] pub(crate) mod core_layout; use core::{mem, num::NonZeroUsize}; pub(crate) mod ptr { use core::{ fmt::{Debug, Formatter}, marker::PhantomData, ptr::NonNull, }; use crate::{util::AsAddress, KnownLayout, _CastType}; /// A raw pointer with more restrictions. /// /// `Ptr` is similar to `NonNull`, but it is more restrictive in the /// following ways: /// - It must derive from a valid allocation /// - It must reference a byte range which is contained inside the /// allocation from which it derives /// - As a consequence, the byte range it references must have a size /// which does not overflow `isize` /// - It must satisfy `T`'s alignment requirement /// /// Thanks to these restrictions, it is easier to prove the soundness of /// some operations using `Ptr`s. /// /// `Ptr<'a, T>` is [covariant] in `'a` and `T`. /// /// [covariant]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/subtyping.html pub struct Ptr<'a, T: 'a + ?Sized> { // INVARIANTS: // 1. `ptr` is derived from some valid Rust allocation, `A` // 2. `ptr` has the same provenance as `A` // 3. `ptr` addresses a byte range which is entirely contained in `A` // 4. `ptr` addresses a byte range whose length fits in an `isize` // 5. `ptr` addresses a byte range which does not wrap around the address // space // 6. `ptr` is validly-aligned for `T` // 7. `A` is guaranteed to live for at least `'a` // 8. `T: 'a` ptr: NonNull, _lifetime: PhantomData<&'a ()>, } impl<'a, T: ?Sized> Copy for Ptr<'a, T> {} impl<'a, T: ?Sized> Clone for Ptr<'a, T> { #[inline] fn clone(&self) -> Self { *self } } impl<'a, T: ?Sized> Ptr<'a, T> { /// Returns a shared reference to the value. /// /// # Safety /// /// For the duration of `'a`: /// - The referenced memory must contain a validly-initialized `T` for /// the duration of `'a`. /// - The referenced memory must not also be referenced by any mutable /// references. /// - The referenced memory must not be mutated, even via an /// [`UnsafeCell`]. /// - There must not exist any references to the same memory region /// which contain `UnsafeCell`s at byte ranges which are not identical /// to the byte ranges at which `T` contains `UnsafeCell`s. /// /// [`UnsafeCell`]: core::cell::UnsafeCell // TODO(#429): The safety requirements are likely overly-restrictive. // Notably, mutation via `UnsafeCell`s is probably fine. Once the rules // are more clearly defined, we should relax the safety requirements. // For an example of why this is subtle, see: // https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/463#issuecomment-1736771593 #[allow(unused)] pub(crate) unsafe fn as_ref(&self) -> &'a T { // SAFETY: // - By invariant, `self.ptr` is properly-aligned for `T`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` is "dereferenceable" in that it points // to a single allocation. // - By invariant, the allocation is live for `'a`. // - The caller promises that no mutable references exist to this // region during `'a`. // - The caller promises that `UnsafeCell`s match exactly. // - The caller promises that no mutation will happen during `'a`, // even via `UnsafeCell`s. // - The caller promises that the memory region contains a // validly-intialized `T`. unsafe { self.ptr.as_ref() } } /// Casts to a different (unsized) target type. /// /// # Safety /// /// The caller promises that /// - `cast(p)` is implemented exactly as follows: `|p: *mut T| p as /// *mut U`. /// - The size of the object referenced by the resulting pointer is less /// than or equal to the size of the object referenced by `self`. /// - The alignment of `U` is less than or equal to the alignment of /// `T`. pub(crate) unsafe fn cast_unsized *mut U>( self, cast: F, ) -> Ptr<'a, U> { let ptr = cast(self.ptr.as_ptr()); // SAFETY: Caller promises that `cast` is just an `as` cast. We call // `cast` on `self.ptr.as_ptr()`, which is non-null by construction. let ptr = unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr) }; // SAFETY: // - By invariant, `self.ptr` is derived from some valid Rust // allocation, and since `ptr` is just `self.ptr as *mut U`, so is // `ptr`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` has the same provenance as `A`, and so // the same is true of `ptr`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a byte range which is // entirely contained in `A`, and so the same is true of `ptr`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a byte range whose length // fits in an `isize`, and so the same is true of `ptr`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a byte range which does not // wrap around the address space, and so the same is true of // `ptr`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` is validly-aligned for `T`. Since // `ptr` has the same address, and since the caller promises that // the alignment of `U` is less than or equal to the alignment of // `T`, `ptr` is validly-aligned for `U`. // - By invariant, `A` is guaranteed to live for at least `'a`. // - `U: 'a` Ptr { ptr, _lifetime: PhantomData } } } impl<'a> Ptr<'a, [u8]> { /// Attempts to cast `self` to a `U` using the given cast type. /// /// Returns `None` if the resulting `U` would be invalidly-aligned or if /// no `U` can fit in `self`. On success, returns a pointer to the /// largest-possible `U` which fits in `self`. /// /// # Safety /// /// The caller may assume that this implementation is correct, and may /// rely on that assumption for the soundness of their code. In /// particular, the caller may assume that, if `try_cast_into` returns /// `Some((ptr, split_at))`, then: /// - If this is a prefix cast, `ptr` refers to the byte range `[0, /// split_at)` in `self`. /// - If this is a suffix cast, `ptr` refers to the byte range /// `[split_at, self.len())` in `self`. /// /// # Panics /// /// Panics if `U` is a DST whose trailing slice element is zero-sized. pub(crate) fn try_cast_into( &self, cast_type: _CastType, ) -> Option<(Ptr<'a, U>, usize)> { // PANICS: By invariant, the byte range addressed by `self.ptr` does // not wrap around the address space. This implies that the sum of // the address (represented as a `usize`) and length do not overflow // `usize`, as required by `validate_cast_and_convert_metadata`. // Thus, this call to `validate_cast_and_convert_metadata` won't // panic. let (elems, split_at) = U::LAYOUT.validate_cast_and_convert_metadata( AsAddress::addr(self.ptr.as_ptr()), self.len(), cast_type, )?; let offset = match cast_type { _CastType::_Prefix => 0, _CastType::_Suffix => split_at, }; let ptr = self.ptr.cast::().as_ptr(); // SAFETY: `offset` is either `0` or `split_at`. // `validate_cast_and_convert_metadata` promises that `split_at` is // in the range `[0, self.len()]`. Thus, in both cases, `offset` is // in `[0, self.len()]`. Thus: // - The resulting pointer is in or one byte past the end of the // same byte range as `self.ptr`. Since, by invariant, `self.ptr` // addresses a byte range entirely contained within a single // allocation, the pointer resulting from this operation is within // or one byte past the end of that same allocation. // - By invariant, `self.len() <= isize::MAX`. Since `offset <= // self.len()`, `offset <= isize::MAX`. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a byte range which does not // wrap around the address space. This means that the base pointer // plus the `self.len()` does not overflow `usize`. Since `offset // <= self.len()`, this addition does not overflow `usize`. let base = unsafe { ptr.add(offset) }; // SAFETY: Since `add` is not allowed to wrap around, the preceding line // produces a pointer whose address is greater than or equal to that of // `ptr`. Since `ptr` is a `NonNull`, `base` is also non-null. let base = unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(base) }; let ptr = U::raw_from_ptr_len(base, elems); // SAFETY: // - By invariant, `self.ptr` is derived from some valid Rust // allocation, `A`, and has the same provenance as `A`. All // operations performed on `self.ptr` and values derived from it // in this method preserve provenance, so: // - `ptr` is derived from a valid Rust allocation, `A`. // - `ptr` has the same provenance as `A`. // - `validate_cast_and_convert_metadata` promises that the object // described by `elems` and `split_at` lives at a byte range which // is a subset of the input byte range. Thus: // - Since, by invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a byte range // entirely contained in `A`, so does `ptr`. // - Since, by invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a range whose // length is not longer than `isize::MAX` bytes, so does `ptr`. // - Since, by invariant, `self.ptr` addresses a range which does // not wrap around the address space, so does `ptr`. // - `validate_cast_and_convert_metadata` promises that the object // described by `split_at` is validly-aligned for `U`. // - By invariant on `self`, `A` is guaranteed to live for at least // `'a`. // - `U: 'a` by trait bound. Some((Ptr { ptr, _lifetime: PhantomData }, split_at)) } /// Attempts to cast `self` into a `U`, failing if all of the bytes of /// `self` cannot be treated as a `U`. /// /// In particular, this method fails if `self` is not validly-aligned /// for `U` or if `self`'s size is not a valid size for `U`. /// /// # Safety /// /// On success, the caller may assume that the returned pointer /// references the same byte range as `self`. #[allow(unused)] #[inline(always)] pub(crate) fn try_cast_into_no_leftover( &self, ) -> Option> { // TODO(#67): Remove this allow. See NonNulSlicelExt for more // details. #[allow(unstable_name_collisions)] match self.try_cast_into(_CastType::_Prefix) { Some((slf, split_at)) if split_at == self.len() => Some(slf), Some(_) | None => None, } } } impl<'a, T> Ptr<'a, [T]> { /// The number of slice elements referenced by `self`. /// /// # Safety /// /// Unsafe code my rely on `len` satisfying the above contract. fn len(&self) -> usize { #[allow(clippy::as_conversions)] let slc = self.ptr.as_ptr() as *const [()]; // SAFETY: // - `()` has alignment 1, so `slc` is trivially aligned. // - `slc` was derived from a non-null pointer. // - The size is 0 regardless of the length, so it is sound to // materialize a reference regardless of location. // - By invariant, `self.ptr` has valid provenance. let slc = unsafe { &*slc }; // This is correct because the preceding `as` cast preserves the // number of slice elements. Per // https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/reference/expressions/operator-expr.html#slice-dst-pointer-to-pointer-cast: // // For slice types like `[T]` and `[U]`, the raw pointer types // `*const [T]`, `*mut [T]`, `*const [U]`, and `*mut [U]` encode // the number of elements in this slice. Casts between these raw // pointer types preserve the number of elements. Note that, as a // consequence, such casts do *not* necessarily preserve the size // of the pointer's referent (e.g., casting `*const [u16]` to // `*const [u8]` will result in a raw pointer which refers to an // object of half the size of the original). The same holds for // `str` and any compound type whose unsized tail is a slice type, // such as struct `Foo(i32, [u8])` or `(u64, Foo)`. // // TODO(#429), // TODO(https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1417): Once this // text is available on the Stable docs, cite those instead of the // Nightly docs. slc.len() } pub(crate) fn iter(&self) -> impl Iterator> { // TODO(#429): Once `NonNull::cast` documents that it preserves // provenance, cite those docs. let base = self.ptr.cast::().as_ptr(); (0..self.len()).map(move |i| { // TODO(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74265): Use // `NonNull::get_unchecked_mut`. // SAFETY: If the following conditions are not satisfied // `pointer::cast` may induce Undefined Behavior [1]: // > 1. Both the starting and resulting pointer must be either // > in bounds or one byte past the end of the same allocated // > object. // > 2. The computed offset, in bytes, cannot overflow an // > `isize`. // > 3. The offset being in bounds cannot rely on “wrapping // > around” the address space. That is, the // > infinite-precision sum must fit in a `usize`. // // [1] https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.add // // We satisfy all three of these conditions here: // 1. `base` (by invariant on `self`) points to an allocated // object. By contract, `self.len()` accurately reflects the // number of elements in the slice. `i` is in bounds of // `c.len()` by construction, and so the result of this // addition cannot overflow past the end of the allocation // referred to by `c`. // 2. By invariant on `Ptr`, `self` addresses a byte range whose // length fits in an `isize`. Since `elem` is contained in // `self`, the computed offset of `elem` must fit within // `isize.` // 3. By invariant on `Ptr`, `self` addresses a byte range which // does not wrap around the address space. Since `elem` is // contained in `self`, the computed offset of `elem` must // wrap around the address space. // // TODO(#429): Once `pointer::add` documents that it preserves // provenance, cite those docs. let elem = unsafe { base.add(i) }; // SAFETY: // - `elem` must not be null. `base` is constructed from a // `NonNull` pointer, and the addition that produces `elem` // must not overflow or wrap around, so `elem >= base > 0`. // // TODO(#429): Once `NonNull::new_unchecked` documents that it // preserves provenance, cite those docs. let elem = unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(elem) }; // SAFETY: The safety invariants of `Ptr` (see definition) are // satisfied: // 1. `elem` is derived from a valid Rust allocation, because // `self` is derived from a valid Rust allocation, by // invariant on `Ptr` // 2. `elem` has the same provenance as `self`, because it // derived from `self` using a series of // provenance-preserving operations // 3. `elem` is entirely contained in the allocation of `self` // (see above) // 4. `elem` addresses a byte range whose length fits in an // `isize` (see above) // 5. `elem` addresses a byte range which does not wrap around // the address space (see above) // 6. `elem` is validly-aligned for `T`. `self`, which // represents a `[T]` is validly aligned for `T`, and `elem` // is an element within that `[T]` // 7. The allocation of `elem` is guaranteed to live for at // least `'a`, because `elem` is entirely contained in // `self`, which lives for at least `'a` by invariant on // `Ptr`. // 8. `T: 'a`, because `elem` is an element within `[T]`, and // `[T]: 'a` by invariant on `Ptr` Ptr { ptr: elem, _lifetime: PhantomData } }) } } impl<'a, T: 'a + ?Sized> From<&'a T> for Ptr<'a, T> { #[inline(always)] fn from(t: &'a T) -> Ptr<'a, T> { // SAFETY: `t` points to a valid Rust allocation, `A`, by // construction. Thus: // - `ptr` is derived from `A` // - Since we use `NonNull::from`, which preserves provenance, `ptr` // has the same provenance as `A` // - Since `NonNull::from` creates a pointer which addresses the // same bytes as `t`, `ptr` addresses a byte range entirely // contained in (in this case, identical to) `A` // - Since `t: &T`, it addresses no more than `isize::MAX` bytes [1] // - Since `t: &T`, it addresses a byte range which does not wrap // around the address space [2] // - Since it is constructed from a valid `&T`, `ptr` is // validly-aligned for `T` // - Since `t: &'a T`, the allocation `A` is guaranteed to live for // at least `'a` // - `T: 'a` by trait bound // // TODO(#429), // TODO(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116181): Once it's // documented, reference the guarantee that `NonNull::from` // preserves provenance. // // TODO(#429), // TODO(https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/465): // - [1] Where does the reference document that allocations fit in // `isize`? // - [2] Where does the reference document that allocations don't // wrap around the address space? Ptr { ptr: NonNull::from(t), _lifetime: PhantomData } } } impl<'a, T: 'a + ?Sized> Debug for Ptr<'a, T> { #[inline] fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> core::fmt::Result { self.ptr.fmt(f) } } #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use core::mem::{self, MaybeUninit}; use super::*; use crate::{util::testutil::AU64, FromBytes}; #[test] fn test_ptrtry_cast_into_soundness() { // This test is designed so that if `Ptr::try_cast_into_xxx` are // buggy, it will manifest as unsoundness that Miri can detect. // - If `size_of::() == 0`, `N == 4` // - Else, `N == 4 * size_of::()` fn test() { let mut bytes = [MaybeUninit::::uninit(); N]; let initialized = [MaybeUninit::new(0u8); N]; for start in 0..=bytes.len() { for end in start..=bytes.len() { // Set all bytes to uninitialized other than those in // the range we're going to pass to `try_cast_from`. // This allows Miri to detect out-of-bounds reads // because they read uninitialized memory. Without this, // some out-of-bounds reads would still be in-bounds of // `bytes`, and so might spuriously be accepted. bytes = [MaybeUninit::::uninit(); N]; let bytes = &mut bytes[start..end]; // Initialize only the byte range we're going to pass to // `try_cast_from`. bytes.copy_from_slice(&initialized[start..end]); let bytes = { let bytes: *const [MaybeUninit] = bytes; #[allow(clippy::as_conversions)] let bytes = bytes as *const [u8]; // SAFETY: We just initialized these bytes to valid // `u8`s. unsafe { &*bytes } }; /// # Safety /// /// - `slf` must reference a byte range which is /// entirely initialized. /// - `slf` must reference a byte range which is only /// referenced by shared references which do not /// contain `UnsafeCell`s during its lifetime. unsafe fn validate_and_get_len( slf: Ptr<'_, T>, ) -> usize { // SAFETY: // - Since all bytes in `slf` are initialized and // `T: FromBytes`, `slf` contains a valid `T`. // - The caller promises that the referenced memory // is not also referenced by any mutable // references. // - The caller promises that the referenced memory // is not also referenced as a type which contains // `UnsafeCell`s. let t = unsafe { slf.as_ref() }; let bytes = { let len = mem::size_of_val(t); let t: *const T = t; // SAFETY: // - We know `t`'s bytes are all initialized // because we just read it from `slf`, which // points to an initialized range of bytes. If // there's a bug and this doesn't hold, then // that's exactly what we're hoping Miri will // catch! // - Since `T: FromBytes`, `T` doesn't contain // any `UnsafeCell`s, so it's okay for `t: T` // and a `&[u8]` to the same memory to be // alive concurrently. unsafe { core::slice::from_raw_parts(t.cast::(), len) } }; // This assertion ensures that `t`'s bytes are read // and compared to another value, which in turn // ensures that Miri gets a chance to notice if any // of `t`'s bytes are uninitialized, which they // shouldn't be (see the comment above). assert_eq!(bytes, vec![0u8; bytes.len()]); mem::size_of_val(t) } for cast_type in [_CastType::_Prefix, _CastType::_Suffix] { if let Some((slf, split_at)) = Ptr::from(bytes).try_cast_into::(cast_type) { // SAFETY: All bytes in `bytes` have been // initialized. let len = unsafe { validate_and_get_len(slf) }; match cast_type { _CastType::_Prefix => assert_eq!(split_at, len), _CastType::_Suffix => assert_eq!(split_at, bytes.len() - len), } } } if let Some(slf) = Ptr::from(bytes).try_cast_into_no_leftover::() { // SAFETY: All bytes in `bytes` have been // initialized. let len = unsafe { validate_and_get_len(slf) }; assert_eq!(len, bytes.len()); } } } } macro_rules! test { ($($ty:ty),*) => { $({ const S: usize = core::mem::size_of::<$ty>(); const N: usize = if S == 0 { 4 } else { S * 4 }; test::(); // We don't support casting into DSTs whose trailing slice // element is a ZST. if S > 0 { test::(); } // TODO: Test with a slice DST once we have any that // implement `KnownLayout + FromBytes`. })* }; } test!(()); test!(u8, u16, u32, u64, u128, usize, AU64); test!(i8, i16, i32, i64, i128, isize); test!(f32, f64); } } } pub(crate) trait AsAddress { fn addr(self) -> usize; } impl<'a, T: ?Sized> AsAddress for &'a T { #[inline(always)] fn addr(self) -> usize { let ptr: *const T = self; AsAddress::addr(ptr) } } impl<'a, T: ?Sized> AsAddress for &'a mut T { #[inline(always)] fn addr(self) -> usize { let ptr: *const T = self; AsAddress::addr(ptr) } } impl AsAddress for *const T { #[inline(always)] fn addr(self) -> usize { // TODO(#181), TODO(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95228): Use // `.addr()` instead of `as usize` once it's stable, and get rid of this // `allow`. Currently, `as usize` is the only way to accomplish this. #[allow(clippy::as_conversions)] #[cfg_attr(__INTERNAL_USE_ONLY_NIGHLTY_FEATURES_IN_TESTS, allow(lossy_provenance_casts))] return self.cast::<()>() as usize; } } impl AsAddress for *mut T { #[inline(always)] fn addr(self) -> usize { let ptr: *const T = self; AsAddress::addr(ptr) } } /// Is `t` aligned to `mem::align_of::()`? #[inline(always)] pub(crate) fn aligned_to(t: T) -> bool { // `mem::align_of::()` is guaranteed to return a non-zero value, which in // turn guarantees that this mod operation will not panic. #[allow(clippy::arithmetic_side_effects)] let remainder = t.addr() % mem::align_of::(); remainder == 0 } /// Round `n` down to the largest value `m` such that `m <= n` and `m % align == /// 0`. /// /// # Panics /// /// May panic if `align` is not a power of two. Even if it doesn't panic in this /// case, it will produce nonsense results. #[inline(always)] pub(crate) const fn round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment( n: usize, align: NonZeroUsize, ) -> usize { let align = align.get(); debug_assert!(align.is_power_of_two()); // Subtraction can't underflow because `align.get() >= 1`. #[allow(clippy::arithmetic_side_effects)] let mask = !(align - 1); n & mask } pub(crate) const fn max(a: NonZeroUsize, b: NonZeroUsize) -> NonZeroUsize { if a.get() < b.get() { b } else { a } } pub(crate) const fn min(a: NonZeroUsize, b: NonZeroUsize) -> NonZeroUsize { if a.get() > b.get() { b } else { a } } /// Since we support multiple versions of Rust, there are often features which /// have been stabilized in the most recent stable release which do not yet /// exist (stably) on our MSRV. This module provides polyfills for those /// features so that we can write more "modern" code, and just remove the /// polyfill once our MSRV supports the corresponding feature. Without this, /// we'd have to write worse/more verbose code and leave TODO comments sprinkled /// throughout the codebase to update to the new pattern once it's stabilized. /// /// Each trait is imported as `_` at the crate root; each polyfill should "just /// work" at usage sites. pub(crate) mod polyfills { use core::ptr::{self, NonNull}; // A polyfill for `NonNull::slice_from_raw_parts` that we can use before our // MSRV is 1.70, when that function was stabilized. // // TODO(#67): Once our MSRV is 1.70, remove this. pub(crate) trait NonNullExt { fn slice_from_raw_parts(data: Self, len: usize) -> NonNull<[T]>; } impl NonNullExt for NonNull { #[inline(always)] fn slice_from_raw_parts(data: Self, len: usize) -> NonNull<[T]> { let ptr = ptr::slice_from_raw_parts_mut(data.as_ptr(), len); // SAFETY: `ptr` is converted from `data`, which is non-null. unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr) } } } } #[cfg(test)] pub(crate) mod testutil { use core::fmt::{self, Display, Formatter}; use crate::*; /// A `T` which is aligned to at least `align_of::()`. #[derive(Default)] pub(crate) struct Align { pub(crate) t: T, _a: [A; 0], } impl Align { pub(crate) fn set_default(&mut self) { self.t = T::default(); } } impl Align { pub(crate) const fn new(t: T) -> Align { Align { t, _a: [] } } } // A `u64` with alignment 8. // // Though `u64` has alignment 8 on some platforms, it's not guaranteed. // By contrast, `AU64` is guaranteed to have alignment 8. #[derive( KnownLayout, FromZeroes, FromBytes, AsBytes, Eq, PartialEq, Ord, PartialOrd, Default, Debug, Copy, Clone, )] #[repr(C, align(8))] pub(crate) struct AU64(pub(crate) u64); impl AU64 { // Converts this `AU64` to bytes using this platform's endianness. pub(crate) fn to_bytes(self) -> [u8; 8] { crate::transmute!(self) } } impl Display for AU64 { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { Display::fmt(&self.0, f) } } #[derive( FromZeroes, FromBytes, Eq, PartialEq, Ord, PartialOrd, Default, Debug, Copy, Clone, )] #[repr(C)] pub(crate) struct Nested { _t: T, _u: U, } } #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use super::*; #[test] fn test_round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment() { fn alt_impl(n: usize, align: NonZeroUsize) -> usize { let mul = n / align.get(); mul * align.get() } for align in [1, 2, 4, 8, 16] { for n in 0..256 { let align = NonZeroUsize::new(align).unwrap(); let want = alt_impl(n, align); let got = round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment(n, align); assert_eq!(got, want, "round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment({n}, {align})"); } } } } #[cfg(kani)] mod proofs { use super::*; #[kani::proof] fn prove_round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment() { fn model_impl(n: usize, align: NonZeroUsize) -> usize { assert!(align.get().is_power_of_two()); let mul = n / align.get(); mul * align.get() } let align: NonZeroUsize = kani::any(); kani::assume(align.get().is_power_of_two()); let n: usize = kani::any(); let expected = model_impl(n, align); let actual = round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment(n, align); assert_eq!(expected, actual, "round_down_to_next_multiple_of_alignment({n}, {align})"); } // Restricted to nightly since we use the unstable `usize::next_multiple_of` // in our model implementation. #[cfg(__INTERNAL_USE_ONLY_NIGHLTY_FEATURES_IN_TESTS)] #[kani::proof] fn prove_padding_needed_for() { fn model_impl(len: usize, align: NonZeroUsize) -> usize { let padded = len.next_multiple_of(align.get()); let padding = padded - len; padding } let align: NonZeroUsize = kani::any(); kani::assume(align.get().is_power_of_two()); let len: usize = kani::any(); // Constrain `len` to valid Rust lengths, since our model implementation // isn't robust to overflow. kani::assume(len <= isize::MAX as usize); kani::assume(align.get() < 1 << 29); let expected = model_impl(len, align); let actual = core_layout::padding_needed_for(len, align); assert_eq!(expected, actual, "padding_needed_for({len}, {align})"); let padded_len = actual + len; assert_eq!(padded_len % align, 0); assert!(padded_len / align >= len / align); } }