linux-yocto/rust/macros/lib.rs
Ethan D. Twardy 113720033d rust: kbuild: expand rusttest target for macros
commit b2c261fa8629dff2bd1143fa790797a773ace102 upstream.

Previously, the rusttest target for the macros crate did not specify
the dependencies necessary to run the rustdoc tests. These tests rely on
the kernel crate, so add the dependencies.

Signed-off-by: Ethan D. Twardy <ethan.twardy@gmail.com>
Link: https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/1076
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240704145607.17732-2-ethan.twardy@gmail.com
[ Rebased (`alloc` is gone nowadays, sysroot handling is simpler) and
  simplified (reused `rustdoc_test` rule instead of adding a new one,
  no need for `rustdoc-compiler_builtins`, removed unneeded `macros`
  explicit path). Made `vtable` example fail (avoiding to increase
  the complexity in the `rusttest` target). Removed unstable
  `-Zproc-macro-backtrace` option. Reworded accordingly. - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2025-03-13 13:01:48 +01:00

433 lines
13 KiB
Rust

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
//! Crate for all kernel procedural macros.
// When fixdep scans this, it will find this string `CONFIG_RUSTC_VERSION_TEXT`
// and thus add a dependency on `include/config/RUSTC_VERSION_TEXT`, which is
// touched by Kconfig when the version string from the compiler changes.
#[macro_use]
mod quote;
mod concat_idents;
mod helpers;
mod module;
mod paste;
mod pin_data;
mod pinned_drop;
mod vtable;
mod zeroable;
use proc_macro::TokenStream;
/// Declares a kernel module.
///
/// The `type` argument should be a type which implements the [`Module`]
/// trait. Also accepts various forms of kernel metadata.
///
/// C header: [`include/linux/moduleparam.h`](srctree/include/linux/moduleparam.h)
///
/// [`Module`]: ../kernel/trait.Module.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::prelude::*;
///
/// module!{
/// type: MyModule,
/// name: "my_kernel_module",
/// author: "Rust for Linux Contributors",
/// description: "My very own kernel module!",
/// license: "GPL",
/// alias: ["alternate_module_name"],
/// }
///
/// struct MyModule;
///
/// impl kernel::Module for MyModule {
/// fn init() -> Result<Self> {
/// // If the parameter is writeable, then the kparam lock must be
/// // taken to read the parameter:
/// {
/// let lock = THIS_MODULE.kernel_param_lock();
/// pr_info!("i32 param is: {}\n", writeable_i32.read(&lock));
/// }
/// // If the parameter is read only, it can be read without locking
/// // the kernel parameters:
/// pr_info!("i32 param is: {}\n", my_i32.read());
/// Ok(Self)
/// }
/// }
/// ```
///
/// ## Firmware
///
/// The following example shows how to declare a kernel module that needs
/// to load binary firmware files. You need to specify the file names of
/// the firmware in the `firmware` field. The information is embedded
/// in the `modinfo` section of the kernel module. For example, a tool to
/// build an initramfs uses this information to put the firmware files into
/// the initramfs image.
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::prelude::*;
///
/// module!{
/// type: MyDeviceDriverModule,
/// name: "my_device_driver_module",
/// author: "Rust for Linux Contributors",
/// description: "My device driver requires firmware",
/// license: "GPL",
/// firmware: ["my_device_firmware1.bin", "my_device_firmware2.bin"],
/// }
///
/// struct MyDeviceDriverModule;
///
/// impl kernel::Module for MyDeviceDriverModule {
/// fn init() -> Result<Self> {
/// Ok(Self)
/// }
/// }
/// ```
///
/// # Supported argument types
/// - `type`: type which implements the [`Module`] trait (required).
/// - `name`: ASCII string literal of the name of the kernel module (required).
/// - `author`: string literal of the author of the kernel module.
/// - `description`: string literal of the description of the kernel module.
/// - `license`: ASCII string literal of the license of the kernel module (required).
/// - `alias`: array of ASCII string literals of the alias names of the kernel module.
/// - `firmware`: array of ASCII string literals of the firmware files of
/// the kernel module.
#[proc_macro]
pub fn module(ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
module::module(ts)
}
/// Declares or implements a vtable trait.
///
/// Linux's use of pure vtables is very close to Rust traits, but they differ
/// in how unimplemented functions are represented. In Rust, traits can provide
/// default implementation for all non-required methods (and the default
/// implementation could just return `Error::EINVAL`); Linux typically use C
/// `NULL` pointers to represent these functions.
///
/// This attribute closes that gap. A trait can be annotated with the
/// `#[vtable]` attribute. Implementers of the trait will then also have to
/// annotate the trait with `#[vtable]`. This attribute generates a `HAS_*`
/// associated constant bool for each method in the trait that is set to true if
/// the implementer has overridden the associated method.
///
/// For a trait method to be optional, it must have a default implementation.
/// This is also the case for traits annotated with `#[vtable]`, but in this
/// case the default implementation will never be executed. The reason for this
/// is that the functions will be called through function pointers installed in
/// C side vtables. When an optional method is not implemented on a `#[vtable]`
/// trait, a NULL entry is installed in the vtable. Thus the default
/// implementation is never called. Since these traits are not designed to be
/// used on the Rust side, it should not be possible to call the default
/// implementation. This is done to ensure that we call the vtable methods
/// through the C vtable, and not through the Rust vtable. Therefore, the
/// default implementation should call `kernel::build_error`, which prevents
/// calls to this function at compile time:
///
/// ```compile_fail
/// # // Intentionally missing `use`s to simplify `rusttest`.
/// kernel::build_error(VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR)
/// ```
///
/// Note that you might need to import [`kernel::error::VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR`].
///
/// This macro should not be used when all functions are required.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::error::VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR;
/// use kernel::prelude::*;
///
/// // Declares a `#[vtable]` trait
/// #[vtable]
/// pub trait Operations: Send + Sync + Sized {
/// fn foo(&self) -> Result<()> {
/// kernel::build_error(VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR)
/// }
///
/// fn bar(&self) -> Result<()> {
/// kernel::build_error(VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR)
/// }
/// }
///
/// struct Foo;
///
/// // Implements the `#[vtable]` trait
/// #[vtable]
/// impl Operations for Foo {
/// fn foo(&self) -> Result<()> {
/// # Err(EINVAL)
/// // ...
/// }
/// }
///
/// assert_eq!(<Foo as Operations>::HAS_FOO, true);
/// assert_eq!(<Foo as Operations>::HAS_BAR, false);
/// ```
///
/// [`kernel::error::VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR`]: ../kernel/error/constant.VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR.html
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn vtable(attr: TokenStream, ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
vtable::vtable(attr, ts)
}
/// Concatenate two identifiers.
///
/// This is useful in macros that need to declare or reference items with names
/// starting with a fixed prefix and ending in a user specified name. The resulting
/// identifier has the span of the second argument.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::macro::concat_idents;
///
/// macro_rules! pub_no_prefix {
/// ($prefix:ident, $($newname:ident),+) => {
/// $(pub(crate) const $newname: u32 = kernel::macros::concat_idents!($prefix, $newname);)+
/// };
/// }
///
/// pub_no_prefix!(
/// binder_driver_return_protocol_,
/// BR_OK,
/// BR_ERROR,
/// BR_TRANSACTION,
/// BR_REPLY,
/// BR_DEAD_REPLY,
/// BR_TRANSACTION_COMPLETE,
/// BR_INCREFS,
/// BR_ACQUIRE,
/// BR_RELEASE,
/// BR_DECREFS,
/// BR_NOOP,
/// BR_SPAWN_LOOPER,
/// BR_DEAD_BINDER,
/// BR_CLEAR_DEATH_NOTIFICATION_DONE,
/// BR_FAILED_REPLY
/// );
///
/// assert_eq!(BR_OK, binder_driver_return_protocol_BR_OK);
/// ```
#[proc_macro]
pub fn concat_idents(ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
concat_idents::concat_idents(ts)
}
/// Used to specify the pinning information of the fields of a struct.
///
/// This is somewhat similar in purpose as
/// [pin-project-lite](https://crates.io/crates/pin-project-lite).
/// Place this macro on a struct definition and then `#[pin]` in front of the attributes of each
/// field you want to structurally pin.
///
/// This macro enables the use of the [`pin_init!`] macro. When pin-initializing a `struct`,
/// then `#[pin]` directs the type of initializer that is required.
///
/// If your `struct` implements `Drop`, then you need to add `PinnedDrop` as arguments to this
/// macro, and change your `Drop` implementation to `PinnedDrop` annotated with
/// `#[`[`macro@pinned_drop`]`]`, since dropping pinned values requires extra care.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// #[pin_data]
/// struct DriverData {
/// #[pin]
/// queue: Mutex<KVec<Command>>,
/// buf: KBox<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>,
/// }
/// ```
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)]
/// struct DriverData {
/// #[pin]
/// queue: Mutex<KVec<Command>>,
/// buf: KBox<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>,
/// raw_info: *mut Info,
/// }
///
/// #[pinned_drop]
/// impl PinnedDrop for DriverData {
/// fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) {
/// unsafe { bindings::destroy_info(self.raw_info) };
/// }
/// }
/// ```
///
/// [`pin_init!`]: ../kernel/macro.pin_init.html
// ^ cannot use direct link, since `kernel` is not a dependency of `macros`.
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn pin_data(inner: TokenStream, item: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
pin_data::pin_data(inner, item)
}
/// Used to implement `PinnedDrop` safely.
///
/// Only works on structs that are annotated via `#[`[`macro@pin_data`]`]`.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// #[pin_data(PinnedDrop)]
/// struct DriverData {
/// #[pin]
/// queue: Mutex<KVec<Command>>,
/// buf: KBox<[u8; 1024 * 1024]>,
/// raw_info: *mut Info,
/// }
///
/// #[pinned_drop]
/// impl PinnedDrop for DriverData {
/// fn drop(self: Pin<&mut Self>) {
/// unsafe { bindings::destroy_info(self.raw_info) };
/// }
/// }
/// ```
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn pinned_drop(args: TokenStream, input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
pinned_drop::pinned_drop(args, input)
}
/// Paste identifiers together.
///
/// Within the `paste!` macro, identifiers inside `[<` and `>]` are concatenated together to form a
/// single identifier.
///
/// This is similar to the [`paste`] crate, but with pasting feature limited to identifiers and
/// literals (lifetimes and documentation strings are not supported). There is a difference in
/// supported modifiers as well.
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::macro::paste;
///
/// macro_rules! pub_no_prefix {
/// ($prefix:ident, $($newname:ident),+) => {
/// paste! {
/// $(pub(crate) const $newname: u32 = [<$prefix $newname>];)+
/// }
/// };
/// }
///
/// pub_no_prefix!(
/// binder_driver_return_protocol_,
/// BR_OK,
/// BR_ERROR,
/// BR_TRANSACTION,
/// BR_REPLY,
/// BR_DEAD_REPLY,
/// BR_TRANSACTION_COMPLETE,
/// BR_INCREFS,
/// BR_ACQUIRE,
/// BR_RELEASE,
/// BR_DECREFS,
/// BR_NOOP,
/// BR_SPAWN_LOOPER,
/// BR_DEAD_BINDER,
/// BR_CLEAR_DEATH_NOTIFICATION_DONE,
/// BR_FAILED_REPLY
/// );
///
/// assert_eq!(BR_OK, binder_driver_return_protocol_BR_OK);
/// ```
///
/// # Modifiers
///
/// For each identifier, it is possible to attach one or multiple modifiers to
/// it.
///
/// Currently supported modifiers are:
/// * `span`: change the span of concatenated identifier to the span of the specified token. By
/// default the span of the `[< >]` group is used.
/// * `lower`: change the identifier to lower case.
/// * `upper`: change the identifier to upper case.
///
/// ```ignore
/// use kernel::macro::paste;
///
/// macro_rules! pub_no_prefix {
/// ($prefix:ident, $($newname:ident),+) => {
/// kernel::macros::paste! {
/// $(pub(crate) const fn [<$newname:lower:span>]() -> u32 { [<$prefix $newname:span>] })+
/// }
/// };
/// }
///
/// pub_no_prefix!(
/// binder_driver_return_protocol_,
/// BR_OK,
/// BR_ERROR,
/// BR_TRANSACTION,
/// BR_REPLY,
/// BR_DEAD_REPLY,
/// BR_TRANSACTION_COMPLETE,
/// BR_INCREFS,
/// BR_ACQUIRE,
/// BR_RELEASE,
/// BR_DECREFS,
/// BR_NOOP,
/// BR_SPAWN_LOOPER,
/// BR_DEAD_BINDER,
/// BR_CLEAR_DEATH_NOTIFICATION_DONE,
/// BR_FAILED_REPLY
/// );
///
/// assert_eq!(br_ok(), binder_driver_return_protocol_BR_OK);
/// ```
///
/// # Literals
///
/// Literals can also be concatenated with other identifiers:
///
/// ```ignore
/// macro_rules! create_numbered_fn {
/// ($name:literal, $val:literal) => {
/// kernel::macros::paste! {
/// fn [<some_ $name _fn $val>]() -> u32 { $val }
/// }
/// };
/// }
///
/// create_numbered_fn!("foo", 100);
///
/// assert_eq!(some_foo_fn100(), 100)
/// ```
///
/// [`paste`]: https://docs.rs/paste/
#[proc_macro]
pub fn paste(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
let mut tokens = input.into_iter().collect();
paste::expand(&mut tokens);
tokens.into_iter().collect()
}
/// Derives the [`Zeroable`] trait for the given struct.
///
/// This can only be used for structs where every field implements the [`Zeroable`] trait.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```rust,ignore
/// #[derive(Zeroable)]
/// pub struct DriverData {
/// id: i64,
/// buf_ptr: *mut u8,
/// len: usize,
/// }
/// ```
#[proc_macro_derive(Zeroable)]
pub fn derive_zeroable(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
zeroable::derive(input)
}