From ace9429bb58fd418f0c81d4c2835699bddf6bde6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2024 10:27:49 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 6.6.15. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- rust/kernel/task.rs | 161 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 161 insertions(+) create mode 100644 rust/kernel/task.rs (limited to 'rust/kernel/task.rs') diff --git a/rust/kernel/task.rs b/rust/kernel/task.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7eda15e5f --- /dev/null +++ b/rust/kernel/task.rs @@ -0,0 +1,161 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +//! Tasks (threads and processes). +//! +//! C header: [`include/linux/sched.h`](../../../../include/linux/sched.h). + +use crate::{bindings, types::Opaque}; +use core::{marker::PhantomData, ops::Deref, ptr}; + +/// Returns the currently running task. +#[macro_export] +macro_rules! current { + () => { + // SAFETY: Deref + addr-of below create a temporary `TaskRef` that cannot outlive the + // caller. + unsafe { &*$crate::task::Task::current() } + }; +} + +/// Wraps the kernel's `struct task_struct`. +/// +/// # Invariants +/// +/// All instances are valid tasks created by the C portion of the kernel. +/// +/// Instances of this type are always ref-counted, that is, a call to `get_task_struct` ensures +/// that the allocation remains valid at least until the matching call to `put_task_struct`. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// The following is an example of getting the PID of the current thread with zero additional cost +/// when compared to the C version: +/// +/// ``` +/// let pid = current!().pid(); +/// ``` +/// +/// Getting the PID of the current process, also zero additional cost: +/// +/// ``` +/// let pid = current!().group_leader().pid(); +/// ``` +/// +/// Getting the current task and storing it in some struct. The reference count is automatically +/// incremented when creating `State` and decremented when it is dropped: +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::{task::Task, types::ARef}; +/// +/// struct State { +/// creator: ARef, +/// index: u32, +/// } +/// +/// impl State { +/// fn new() -> Self { +/// Self { +/// creator: current!().into(), +/// index: 0, +/// } +/// } +/// } +/// ``` +#[repr(transparent)] +pub struct Task(pub(crate) Opaque); + +// SAFETY: By design, the only way to access a `Task` is via the `current` function or via an +// `ARef` obtained through the `AlwaysRefCounted` impl. This means that the only situation in +// which a `Task` can be accessed mutably is when the refcount drops to zero and the destructor +// runs. It is safe for that to happen on any thread, so it is ok for this type to be `Send`. +unsafe impl Send for Task {} + +// SAFETY: It's OK to access `Task` through shared references from other threads because we're +// either accessing properties that don't change (e.g., `pid`, `group_leader`) or that are properly +// synchronised by C code (e.g., `signal_pending`). +unsafe impl Sync for Task {} + +/// The type of process identifiers (PIDs). +type Pid = bindings::pid_t; + +impl Task { + /// Returns a task reference for the currently executing task/thread. + /// + /// The recommended way to get the current task/thread is to use the + /// [`current`](crate::current) macro because it is safe. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// Callers must ensure that the returned object doesn't outlive the current task/thread. + pub unsafe fn current() -> impl Deref { + struct TaskRef<'a> { + task: &'a Task, + _not_send: PhantomData<*mut ()>, + } + + impl Deref for TaskRef<'_> { + type Target = Task; + + fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target { + self.task + } + } + + // SAFETY: Just an FFI call with no additional safety requirements. + let ptr = unsafe { bindings::get_current() }; + + TaskRef { + // SAFETY: If the current thread is still running, the current task is valid. Given + // that `TaskRef` is not `Send`, we know it cannot be transferred to another thread + // (where it could potentially outlive the caller). + task: unsafe { &*ptr.cast() }, + _not_send: PhantomData, + } + } + + /// Returns the group leader of the given task. + pub fn group_leader(&self) -> &Task { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, we know that `self.0` is a valid task. Valid tasks always + // have a valid group_leader. + let ptr = unsafe { *ptr::addr_of!((*self.0.get()).group_leader) }; + + // SAFETY: The lifetime of the returned task reference is tied to the lifetime of `self`, + // and given that a task has a reference to its group leader, we know it must be valid for + // the lifetime of the returned task reference. + unsafe { &*ptr.cast() } + } + + /// Returns the PID of the given task. + pub fn pid(&self) -> Pid { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, we know that `self.0` is a valid task. Valid tasks always + // have a valid pid. + unsafe { *ptr::addr_of!((*self.0.get()).pid) } + } + + /// Determines whether the given task has pending signals. + pub fn signal_pending(&self) -> bool { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, we know that `self.0` is valid. + unsafe { bindings::signal_pending(self.0.get()) != 0 } + } + + /// Wakes up the task. + pub fn wake_up(&self) { + // SAFETY: By the type invariant, we know that `self.0.get()` is non-null and valid. + // And `wake_up_process` is safe to be called for any valid task, even if the task is + // running. + unsafe { bindings::wake_up_process(self.0.get()) }; + } +} + +// SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that `Task` is always ref-counted. +unsafe impl crate::types::AlwaysRefCounted for Task { + fn inc_ref(&self) { + // SAFETY: The existence of a shared reference means that the refcount is nonzero. + unsafe { bindings::get_task_struct(self.0.get()) }; + } + + unsafe fn dec_ref(obj: ptr::NonNull) { + // SAFETY: The safety requirements guarantee that the refcount is nonzero. + unsafe { bindings::put_task_struct(obj.cast().as_ptr()) } + } +} -- cgit v1.2.3