From 698f8c2f01ea549d77d7dc3338a12e04c11057b9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:02:58 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.64.0+dfsg1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs | 111 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 111 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs (limited to 'vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs') diff --git a/vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs b/vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e99a323ce --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/rustix/src/imp/libc/mod.rs @@ -0,0 +1,111 @@ +//! The libc backend. +//! +//! On most platforms, this uses the `libc` crate to make system calls. On +//! Windows, this uses the Winsock2 API in `windows-sys`, which can be adapted +//! to have a very `libc`-like interface. + +// Every FFI call requires an unsafe block, and there are a lot of FFI +// calls. For now, set this to allow for the libc backend. +#![allow(clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks)] +// Lots of libc types vary between platforms, so we often need a `.into()` on +// one platform where it's redundant on another. +#![allow(clippy::useless_conversion)] + +#[cfg(not(any(windows, target_os = "wasi")))] +#[macro_use] +mod weak; + +mod conv; +mod offset; + +#[cfg(windows)] +mod io_lifetimes; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +#[cfg(not(feature = "std"))] +pub(crate) mod fd { + pub(crate) use super::c::c_int as LibcFd; + pub use crate::io::fd::*; +} +#[cfg(windows)] +pub(crate) mod fd { + pub use super::io_lifetimes::*; +} +#[cfg(not(windows))] +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +pub(crate) mod fd { + pub use io_lifetimes::*; + + #[cfg(target_os = "wasi")] + #[allow(unused_imports)] + pub(crate) use super::c::c_int as LibcFd; + #[cfg(unix)] + #[allow(unused_imports)] + pub(crate) use std::os::unix::io::RawFd as LibcFd; + #[cfg(unix)] + pub use std::os::unix::io::{AsRawFd, FromRawFd, IntoRawFd, RawFd}; + #[cfg(target_os = "wasi")] + pub use std::os::wasi::io::{AsRawFd, FromRawFd, IntoRawFd, RawFd}; +} + +// On Windows we emulate selected libc-compatible interfaces. On non-Windows, +// we just use libc here, since this is the libc backend. +#[cfg(windows)] +#[path = "winsock_c.rs"] +pub(crate) mod c; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +pub(crate) use libc as c; + +#[cfg(not(windows))] +// #[cfg(feature = "fs")] // TODO: Enable this once `OwnedFd` moves out of the tree. +pub(crate) mod fs; +pub(crate) mod io; +#[cfg(any(target_os = "android", target_os = "linux"))] +#[cfg(feature = "io_uring")] +#[cfg_attr(doc_cfg, doc(cfg(feature = "io_uring")))] +pub(crate) mod io_uring; +#[cfg(not(any(windows, target_os = "wasi")))] +#[cfg(any(feature = "mm", feature = "time", target_arch = "x86"))] // vdso.rs uses `madvise` +pub(crate) mod mm; +#[cfg(not(any(target_os = "redox", target_os = "wasi")))] +#[cfg(feature = "net")] +pub(crate) mod net; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +#[cfg(any( + feature = "param", + feature = "runtime", + feature = "time", + target_arch = "x86", +))] +pub(crate) mod param; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +pub(crate) mod process; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +#[cfg(feature = "rand")] +pub(crate) mod rand; +#[cfg(not(any(windows, target_os = "wasi")))] +#[cfg(feature = "termios")] +pub(crate) mod termios; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +#[cfg(feature = "thread")] +pub(crate) mod thread; +#[cfg(not(windows))] +pub(crate) mod time; + +/// If the host libc is glibc, return `true` if it is less than version 2.25. +/// +/// To restate and clarify, this function returning true does not mean the libc +/// is glibc just that if it is glibc, it is less than version 2.25. +/// +/// For now, this function is only available on Linux, but if it ends up being +/// used beyond that, this could be changed to e.g. `#[cfg(unix)]`. +#[cfg(all(unix, target_env = "gnu"))] +pub(crate) fn if_glibc_is_less_than_2_25() -> bool { + // This is also defined inside `weak_or_syscall!` in + // imp/libc/rand/syscalls.rs, but it's not convenient to re-export the weak + // symbol from that macro, so we duplicate it at a small cost here. + weak! { fn getrandom(*mut c::c_void, c::size_t, c::c_uint) -> c::ssize_t } + + // glibc 2.25 has `getrandom`, which is how we satisfy the API contract of + // this function. But, there are likely other libc versions which have it. + getrandom.get().is_none() +} -- cgit v1.2.3