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Diffstat (limited to 'rust/kernel/workqueue.rs')
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diff --git a/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..706e833e9702 --- /dev/null +++ b/rust/kernel/workqueue.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1024 @@ +// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +//! Work queues. +//! +//! This file has two components: The raw work item API, and the safe work item API. +//! +//! One pattern that is used in both APIs is the `ID` const generic, which exists to allow a single +//! type to define multiple `work_struct` fields. This is done by choosing an id for each field, +//! and using that id to specify which field you wish to use. (The actual value doesn't matter, as +//! long as you use different values for different fields of the same struct.) Since these IDs are +//! generic, they are used only at compile-time, so they shouldn't exist in the final binary. +//! +//! # The raw API +//! +//! The raw API consists of the [`RawWorkItem`] trait, where the work item needs to provide an +//! arbitrary function that knows how to enqueue the work item. It should usually not be used +//! directly, but if you want to, you can use it without using the pieces from the safe API. +//! +//! # The safe API +//! +//! The safe API is used via the [`Work`] struct and [`WorkItem`] traits. Furthermore, it also +//! includes a trait called [`WorkItemPointer`], which is usually not used directly by the user. +//! +//! * The [`Work`] struct is the Rust wrapper for the C `work_struct` type. +//! * The [`WorkItem`] trait is implemented for structs that can be enqueued to a workqueue. +//! * The [`WorkItemPointer`] trait is implemented for the pointer type that points at a something +//! that implements [`WorkItem`]. +//! +//! ## Examples +//! +//! This example defines a struct that holds an integer and can be scheduled on the workqueue. When +//! the struct is executed, it will print the integer. Since there is only one `work_struct` field, +//! we do not need to specify ids for the fields. +//! +//! ``` +//! use kernel::sync::Arc; +//! use kernel::workqueue::{self, impl_has_work, new_work, Work, WorkItem}; +//! +//! #[pin_data] +//! struct MyStruct { +//! value: i32, +//! #[pin] +//! work: Work<MyStruct>, +//! } +//! +//! impl_has_work! { +//! impl HasWork<Self> for MyStruct { self.work } +//! } +//! +//! impl MyStruct { +//! fn new(value: i32) -> Result<Arc<Self>> { +//! Arc::pin_init(pin_init!(MyStruct { +//! value, +//! work <- new_work!("MyStruct::work"), +//! }), GFP_KERNEL) +//! } +//! } +//! +//! impl WorkItem for MyStruct { +//! type Pointer = Arc<MyStruct>; +//! +//! fn run(this: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! pr_info!("The value is: {}\n", this.value); +//! } +//! } +//! +//! /// This method will enqueue the struct for execution on the system workqueue, where its value +//! /// will be printed. +//! fn print_later(val: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! let _ = workqueue::system().enqueue(val); +//! } +//! # print_later(MyStruct::new(42).unwrap()); +//! ``` +//! +//! The following example shows how multiple `work_struct` fields can be used: +//! +//! ``` +//! use kernel::sync::Arc; +//! use kernel::workqueue::{self, impl_has_work, new_work, Work, WorkItem}; +//! +//! #[pin_data] +//! struct MyStruct { +//! value_1: i32, +//! value_2: i32, +//! #[pin] +//! work_1: Work<MyStruct, 1>, +//! #[pin] +//! work_2: Work<MyStruct, 2>, +//! } +//! +//! impl_has_work! { +//! impl HasWork<Self, 1> for MyStruct { self.work_1 } +//! impl HasWork<Self, 2> for MyStruct { self.work_2 } +//! } +//! +//! impl MyStruct { +//! fn new(value_1: i32, value_2: i32) -> Result<Arc<Self>> { +//! Arc::pin_init(pin_init!(MyStruct { +//! value_1, +//! value_2, +//! work_1 <- new_work!("MyStruct::work_1"), +//! work_2 <- new_work!("MyStruct::work_2"), +//! }), GFP_KERNEL) +//! } +//! } +//! +//! impl WorkItem<1> for MyStruct { +//! type Pointer = Arc<MyStruct>; +//! +//! fn run(this: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! pr_info!("The value is: {}\n", this.value_1); +//! } +//! } +//! +//! impl WorkItem<2> for MyStruct { +//! type Pointer = Arc<MyStruct>; +//! +//! fn run(this: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! pr_info!("The second value is: {}\n", this.value_2); +//! } +//! } +//! +//! fn print_1_later(val: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! let _ = workqueue::system().enqueue::<Arc<MyStruct>, 1>(val); +//! } +//! +//! fn print_2_later(val: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! let _ = workqueue::system().enqueue::<Arc<MyStruct>, 2>(val); +//! } +//! # print_1_later(MyStruct::new(24, 25).unwrap()); +//! # print_2_later(MyStruct::new(41, 42).unwrap()); +//! ``` +//! +//! This example shows how you can schedule delayed work items: +//! +//! ``` +//! use kernel::sync::Arc; +//! use kernel::workqueue::{self, impl_has_delayed_work, new_delayed_work, DelayedWork, WorkItem}; +//! +//! #[pin_data] +//! struct MyStruct { +//! value: i32, +//! #[pin] +//! work: DelayedWork<MyStruct>, +//! } +//! +//! impl_has_delayed_work! { +//! impl HasDelayedWork<Self> for MyStruct { self.work } +//! } +//! +//! impl MyStruct { +//! fn new(value: i32) -> Result<Arc<Self>> { +//! Arc::pin_init( +//! pin_init!(MyStruct { +//! value, +//! work <- new_delayed_work!("MyStruct::work"), +//! }), +//! GFP_KERNEL, +//! ) +//! } +//! } +//! +//! impl WorkItem for MyStruct { +//! type Pointer = Arc<MyStruct>; +//! +//! fn run(this: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! pr_info!("The value is: {}\n", this.value); +//! } +//! } +//! +//! /// This method will enqueue the struct for execution on the system workqueue, where its value +//! /// will be printed 12 jiffies later. +//! fn print_later(val: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! let _ = workqueue::system().enqueue_delayed(val, 12); +//! } +//! +//! /// It is also possible to use the ordinary `enqueue` method together with `DelayedWork`. This +//! /// is equivalent to calling `enqueue_delayed` with a delay of zero. +//! fn print_now(val: Arc<MyStruct>) { +//! let _ = workqueue::system().enqueue(val); +//! } +//! # print_later(MyStruct::new(42).unwrap()); +//! # print_now(MyStruct::new(42).unwrap()); +//! ``` +//! +//! C header: [`include/linux/workqueue.h`](srctree/include/linux/workqueue.h) + +use crate::{ + alloc::{AllocError, Flags}, + container_of, + prelude::*, + sync::Arc, + sync::LockClassKey, + time::Jiffies, + types::Opaque, +}; +use core::marker::PhantomData; + +/// Creates a [`Work`] initialiser with the given name and a newly-created lock class. +#[macro_export] +macro_rules! new_work { + ($($name:literal)?) => { + $crate::workqueue::Work::new($crate::optional_name!($($name)?), $crate::static_lock_class!()) + }; +} +pub use new_work; + +/// Creates a [`DelayedWork`] initialiser with the given name and a newly-created lock class. +#[macro_export] +macro_rules! new_delayed_work { + () => { + $crate::workqueue::DelayedWork::new( + $crate::optional_name!(), + $crate::static_lock_class!(), + $crate::c_str!(::core::concat!( + ::core::file!(), + ":", + ::core::line!(), + "_timer" + )), + $crate::static_lock_class!(), + ) + }; + ($name:literal) => { + $crate::workqueue::DelayedWork::new( + $crate::c_str!($name), + $crate::static_lock_class!(), + $crate::c_str!(::core::concat!($name, "_timer")), + $crate::static_lock_class!(), + ) + }; +} +pub use new_delayed_work; + +/// A kernel work queue. +/// +/// Wraps the kernel's C `struct workqueue_struct`. +/// +/// It allows work items to be queued to run on thread pools managed by the kernel. Several are +/// always available, for example, `system`, `system_highpri`, `system_long`, etc. +#[repr(transparent)] +pub struct Queue(Opaque<bindings::workqueue_struct>); + +// SAFETY: Accesses to workqueues used by [`Queue`] are thread-safe. +unsafe impl Send for Queue {} +// SAFETY: Accesses to workqueues used by [`Queue`] are thread-safe. +unsafe impl Sync for Queue {} + +impl Queue { + /// Use the provided `struct workqueue_struct` with Rust. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The caller must ensure that the provided raw pointer is not dangling, that it points at a + /// valid workqueue, and that it remains valid until the end of `'a`. + pub unsafe fn from_raw<'a>(ptr: *const bindings::workqueue_struct) -> &'a Queue { + // SAFETY: The `Queue` type is `#[repr(transparent)]`, so the pointer cast is valid. The + // caller promises that the pointer is not dangling. + unsafe { &*ptr.cast::<Queue>() } + } + + /// Enqueues a work item. + /// + /// This may fail if the work item is already enqueued in a workqueue. + /// + /// The work item will be submitted using `WORK_CPU_UNBOUND`. + pub fn enqueue<W, const ID: u64>(&self, w: W) -> W::EnqueueOutput + where + W: RawWorkItem<ID> + Send + 'static, + { + let queue_ptr = self.0.get(); + + // SAFETY: We only return `false` if the `work_struct` is already in a workqueue. The other + // `__enqueue` requirements are not relevant since `W` is `Send` and static. + // + // The call to `bindings::queue_work_on` will dereference the provided raw pointer, which + // is ok because `__enqueue` guarantees that the pointer is valid for the duration of this + // closure. + // + // Furthermore, if the C workqueue code accesses the pointer after this call to + // `__enqueue`, then the work item was successfully enqueued, and `bindings::queue_work_on` + // will have returned true. In this case, `__enqueue` promises that the raw pointer will + // stay valid until we call the function pointer in the `work_struct`, so the access is ok. + unsafe { + w.__enqueue(move |work_ptr| { + bindings::queue_work_on( + bindings::wq_misc_consts_WORK_CPU_UNBOUND as ffi::c_int, + queue_ptr, + work_ptr, + ) + }) + } + } + + /// Enqueues a delayed work item. + /// + /// This may fail if the work item is already enqueued in a workqueue. + /// + /// The work item will be submitted using `WORK_CPU_UNBOUND`. + pub fn enqueue_delayed<W, const ID: u64>(&self, w: W, delay: Jiffies) -> W::EnqueueOutput + where + W: RawDelayedWorkItem<ID> + Send + 'static, + { + let queue_ptr = self.0.get(); + + // SAFETY: We only return `false` if the `work_struct` is already in a workqueue. The other + // `__enqueue` requirements are not relevant since `W` is `Send` and static. + // + // The call to `bindings::queue_delayed_work_on` will dereference the provided raw pointer, + // which is ok because `__enqueue` guarantees that the pointer is valid for the duration of + // this closure, and the safety requirements of `RawDelayedWorkItem` expands this + // requirement to apply to the entire `delayed_work`. + // + // Furthermore, if the C workqueue code accesses the pointer after this call to + // `__enqueue`, then the work item was successfully enqueued, and + // `bindings::queue_delayed_work_on` will have returned true. In this case, `__enqueue` + // promises that the raw pointer will stay valid until we call the function pointer in the + // `work_struct`, so the access is ok. + unsafe { + w.__enqueue(move |work_ptr| { + bindings::queue_delayed_work_on( + bindings::wq_misc_consts_WORK_CPU_UNBOUND as ffi::c_int, + queue_ptr, + container_of!(work_ptr, bindings::delayed_work, work), + delay, + ) + }) + } + } + + /// Tries to spawn the given function or closure as a work item. + /// + /// This method can fail because it allocates memory to store the work item. + pub fn try_spawn<T: 'static + Send + FnOnce()>( + &self, + flags: Flags, + func: T, + ) -> Result<(), AllocError> { + let init = pin_init!(ClosureWork { + work <- new_work!("Queue::try_spawn"), + func: Some(func), + }); + + self.enqueue(KBox::pin_init(init, flags).map_err(|_| AllocError)?); + Ok(()) + } +} + +/// A helper type used in [`try_spawn`]. +/// +/// [`try_spawn`]: Queue::try_spawn +#[pin_data] +struct ClosureWork<T> { + #[pin] + work: Work<ClosureWork<T>>, + func: Option<T>, +} + +impl<T: FnOnce()> WorkItem for ClosureWork<T> { + type Pointer = Pin<KBox<Self>>; + + fn run(mut this: Pin<KBox<Self>>) { + if let Some(func) = this.as_mut().project().func.take() { + (func)() + } + } +} + +/// A raw work item. +/// +/// This is the low-level trait that is designed for being as general as possible. +/// +/// The `ID` parameter to this trait exists so that a single type can provide multiple +/// implementations of this trait. For example, if a struct has multiple `work_struct` fields, then +/// you will implement this trait once for each field, using a different id for each field. The +/// actual value of the id is not important as long as you use different ids for different fields +/// of the same struct. (Fields of different structs need not use different ids.) +/// +/// Note that the id is used only to select the right method to call during compilation. It won't be +/// part of the final executable. +/// +/// # Safety +/// +/// Implementers must ensure that any pointers passed to a `queue_work_on` closure by [`__enqueue`] +/// remain valid for the duration specified in the guarantees section of the documentation for +/// [`__enqueue`]. +/// +/// [`__enqueue`]: RawWorkItem::__enqueue +pub unsafe trait RawWorkItem<const ID: u64> { + /// The return type of [`Queue::enqueue`]. + type EnqueueOutput; + + /// Enqueues this work item on a queue using the provided `queue_work_on` method. + /// + /// # Guarantees + /// + /// If this method calls the provided closure, then the raw pointer is guaranteed to point at a + /// valid `work_struct` for the duration of the call to the closure. If the closure returns + /// true, then it is further guaranteed that the pointer remains valid until someone calls the + /// function pointer stored in the `work_struct`. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The provided closure may only return `false` if the `work_struct` is already in a workqueue. + /// + /// If the work item type is annotated with any lifetimes, then you must not call the function + /// pointer after any such lifetime expires. (Never calling the function pointer is okay.) + /// + /// If the work item type is not [`Send`], then the function pointer must be called on the same + /// thread as the call to `__enqueue`. + unsafe fn __enqueue<F>(self, queue_work_on: F) -> Self::EnqueueOutput + where + F: FnOnce(*mut bindings::work_struct) -> bool; +} + +/// A raw delayed work item. +/// +/// # Safety +/// +/// If the `__enqueue` method in the `RawWorkItem` implementation calls the closure, then the +/// provided pointer must point at the `work` field of a valid `delayed_work`, and the guarantees +/// that `__enqueue` provides about accessing the `work_struct` must also apply to the rest of the +/// `delayed_work` struct. +pub unsafe trait RawDelayedWorkItem<const ID: u64>: RawWorkItem<ID> {} + +/// Defines the method that should be called directly when a work item is executed. +/// +/// This trait is implemented by `Pin<KBox<T>>` and [`Arc<T>`], and is mainly intended to be +/// implemented for smart pointer types. For your own structs, you would implement [`WorkItem`] +/// instead. The [`run`] method on this trait will usually just perform the appropriate +/// `container_of` translation and then call into the [`run`][WorkItem::run] method from the +/// [`WorkItem`] trait. +/// +/// This trait is used when the `work_struct` field is defined using the [`Work`] helper. +/// +/// # Safety +/// +/// Implementers must ensure that [`__enqueue`] uses a `work_struct` initialized with the [`run`] +/// method of this trait as the function pointer. +/// +/// [`__enqueue`]: RawWorkItem::__enqueue +/// [`run`]: WorkItemPointer::run +pub unsafe trait WorkItemPointer<const ID: u64>: RawWorkItem<ID> { + /// Run this work item. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The provided `work_struct` pointer must originate from a previous call to [`__enqueue`] + /// where the `queue_work_on` closure returned true, and the pointer must still be valid. + /// + /// [`__enqueue`]: RawWorkItem::__enqueue + unsafe extern "C" fn run(ptr: *mut bindings::work_struct); +} + +/// Defines the method that should be called when this work item is executed. +/// +/// This trait is used when the `work_struct` field is defined using the [`Work`] helper. +pub trait WorkItem<const ID: u64 = 0> { + /// The pointer type that this struct is wrapped in. This will typically be `Arc<Self>` or + /// `Pin<KBox<Self>>`. + type Pointer: WorkItemPointer<ID>; + + /// The method that should be called when this work item is executed. + fn run(this: Self::Pointer); +} + +/// Links for a work item. +/// +/// This struct contains a function pointer to the [`run`] function from the [`WorkItemPointer`] +/// trait, and defines the linked list pointers necessary to enqueue a work item in a workqueue. +/// +/// Wraps the kernel's C `struct work_struct`. +/// +/// This is a helper type used to associate a `work_struct` with the [`WorkItem`] that uses it. +/// +/// [`run`]: WorkItemPointer::run +#[pin_data] +#[repr(transparent)] +pub struct Work<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64 = 0> { + #[pin] + work: Opaque<bindings::work_struct>, + _inner: PhantomData<T>, +} + +// SAFETY: Kernel work items are usable from any thread. +// +// We do not need to constrain `T` since the work item does not actually contain a `T`. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> Send for Work<T, ID> {} +// SAFETY: Kernel work items are usable from any thread. +// +// We do not need to constrain `T` since the work item does not actually contain a `T`. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> Sync for Work<T, ID> {} + +impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> Work<T, ID> { + /// Creates a new instance of [`Work`]. + #[inline] + pub fn new(name: &'static CStr, key: Pin<&'static LockClassKey>) -> impl PinInit<Self> + where + T: WorkItem<ID>, + { + pin_init!(Self { + work <- Opaque::ffi_init(|slot| { + // SAFETY: The `WorkItemPointer` implementation promises that `run` can be used as + // the work item function. + unsafe { + bindings::init_work_with_key( + slot, + Some(T::Pointer::run), + false, + name.as_char_ptr(), + key.as_ptr(), + ) + } + }), + _inner: PhantomData, + }) + } + + /// Get a pointer to the inner `work_struct`. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The provided pointer must not be dangling and must be properly aligned. (But the memory + /// need not be initialized.) + #[inline] + pub unsafe fn raw_get(ptr: *const Self) -> *mut bindings::work_struct { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is aligned and not dangling. + // + // A pointer cast would also be ok due to `#[repr(transparent)]`. We use `addr_of!` so that + // the compiler does not complain that the `work` field is unused. + unsafe { Opaque::cast_into(core::ptr::addr_of!((*ptr).work)) } + } +} + +/// Declares that a type contains a [`Work<T, ID>`]. +/// +/// The intended way of using this trait is via the [`impl_has_work!`] macro. You can use the macro +/// like this: +/// +/// ```no_run +/// use kernel::workqueue::{impl_has_work, Work}; +/// +/// struct MyWorkItem { +/// work_field: Work<MyWorkItem, 1>, +/// } +/// +/// impl_has_work! { +/// impl HasWork<MyWorkItem, 1> for MyWorkItem { self.work_field } +/// } +/// ``` +/// +/// Note that since the [`Work`] type is annotated with an id, you can have several `work_struct` +/// fields by using a different id for each one. +/// +/// # Safety +/// +/// The methods [`raw_get_work`] and [`work_container_of`] must return valid pointers and must be +/// true inverses of each other; that is, they must satisfy the following invariants: +/// - `work_container_of(raw_get_work(ptr)) == ptr` for any `ptr: *mut Self`. +/// - `raw_get_work(work_container_of(ptr)) == ptr` for any `ptr: *mut Work<T, ID>`. +/// +/// [`impl_has_work!`]: crate::impl_has_work +/// [`raw_get_work`]: HasWork::raw_get_work +/// [`work_container_of`]: HasWork::work_container_of +pub unsafe trait HasWork<T, const ID: u64 = 0> { + /// Returns a pointer to the [`Work<T, ID>`] field. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The provided pointer must point at a valid struct of type `Self`. + unsafe fn raw_get_work(ptr: *mut Self) -> *mut Work<T, ID>; + + /// Returns a pointer to the struct containing the [`Work<T, ID>`] field. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The pointer must point at a [`Work<T, ID>`] field in a struct of type `Self`. + unsafe fn work_container_of(ptr: *mut Work<T, ID>) -> *mut Self; +} + +/// Used to safely implement the [`HasWork<T, ID>`] trait. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::Arc; +/// use kernel::workqueue::{self, impl_has_work, Work}; +/// +/// struct MyStruct<'a, T, const N: usize> { +/// work_field: Work<MyStruct<'a, T, N>, 17>, +/// f: fn(&'a [T; N]), +/// } +/// +/// impl_has_work! { +/// impl{'a, T, const N: usize} HasWork<MyStruct<'a, T, N>, 17> +/// for MyStruct<'a, T, N> { self.work_field } +/// } +/// ``` +#[macro_export] +macro_rules! impl_has_work { + ($(impl$({$($generics:tt)*})? + HasWork<$work_type:ty $(, $id:tt)?> + for $self:ty + { self.$field:ident } + )*) => {$( + // SAFETY: The implementation of `raw_get_work` only compiles if the field has the right + // type. + unsafe impl$(<$($generics)+>)? $crate::workqueue::HasWork<$work_type $(, $id)?> for $self { + #[inline] + unsafe fn raw_get_work(ptr: *mut Self) -> *mut $crate::workqueue::Work<$work_type $(, $id)?> { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is not dangling. + unsafe { + ::core::ptr::addr_of_mut!((*ptr).$field) + } + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn work_container_of( + ptr: *mut $crate::workqueue::Work<$work_type $(, $id)?>, + ) -> *mut Self { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer points at a field of the right type + // in the right kind of struct. + unsafe { $crate::container_of!(ptr, Self, $field) } + } + } + )*}; +} +pub use impl_has_work; + +impl_has_work! { + impl{T} HasWork<Self> for ClosureWork<T> { self.work } +} + +/// Links for a delayed work item. +/// +/// This struct contains a function pointer to the [`run`] function from the [`WorkItemPointer`] +/// trait, and defines the linked list pointers necessary to enqueue a work item in a workqueue in +/// a delayed manner. +/// +/// Wraps the kernel's C `struct delayed_work`. +/// +/// This is a helper type used to associate a `delayed_work` with the [`WorkItem`] that uses it. +/// +/// [`run`]: WorkItemPointer::run +#[pin_data] +#[repr(transparent)] +pub struct DelayedWork<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64 = 0> { + #[pin] + dwork: Opaque<bindings::delayed_work>, + _inner: PhantomData<T>, +} + +// SAFETY: Kernel work items are usable from any thread. +// +// We do not need to constrain `T` since the work item does not actually contain a `T`. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> Send for DelayedWork<T, ID> {} +// SAFETY: Kernel work items are usable from any thread. +// +// We do not need to constrain `T` since the work item does not actually contain a `T`. +unsafe impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> Sync for DelayedWork<T, ID> {} + +impl<T: ?Sized, const ID: u64> DelayedWork<T, ID> { + /// Creates a new instance of [`DelayedWork`]. + #[inline] + pub fn new( + work_name: &'static CStr, + work_key: Pin<&'static LockClassKey>, + timer_name: &'static CStr, + timer_key: Pin<&'static LockClassKey>, + ) -> impl PinInit<Self> + where + T: WorkItem<ID>, + { + pin_init!(Self { + dwork <- Opaque::ffi_init(|slot: *mut bindings::delayed_work| { + // SAFETY: The `WorkItemPointer` implementation promises that `run` can be used as + // the work item function. + unsafe { + bindings::init_work_with_key( + core::ptr::addr_of_mut!((*slot).work), + Some(T::Pointer::run), + false, + work_name.as_char_ptr(), + work_key.as_ptr(), + ) + } + + // SAFETY: The `delayed_work_timer_fn` function pointer can be used here because + // the timer is embedded in a `struct delayed_work`, and only ever scheduled via + // the core workqueue code, and configured to run in irqsafe context. + unsafe { + bindings::timer_init_key( + core::ptr::addr_of_mut!((*slot).timer), + Some(bindings::delayed_work_timer_fn), + bindings::TIMER_IRQSAFE, + timer_name.as_char_ptr(), + timer_key.as_ptr(), + ) + } + }), + _inner: PhantomData, + }) + } + + /// Get a pointer to the inner `delayed_work`. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// The provided pointer must not be dangling and must be properly aligned. (But the memory + /// need not be initialized.) + #[inline] + pub unsafe fn raw_as_work(ptr: *const Self) -> *mut Work<T, ID> { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is aligned and not dangling. + let dw: *mut bindings::delayed_work = + unsafe { Opaque::cast_into(core::ptr::addr_of!((*ptr).dwork)) }; + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is aligned and not dangling. + let wrk: *mut bindings::work_struct = unsafe { core::ptr::addr_of_mut!((*dw).work) }; + // CAST: Work and work_struct have compatible layouts. + wrk.cast() + } +} + +/// Declares that a type contains a [`DelayedWork<T, ID>`]. +/// +/// # Safety +/// +/// The `HasWork<T, ID>` implementation must return a `work_struct` that is stored in the `work` +/// field of a `delayed_work` with the same access rules as the `work_struct`. +pub unsafe trait HasDelayedWork<T, const ID: u64 = 0>: HasWork<T, ID> {} + +/// Used to safely implement the [`HasDelayedWork<T, ID>`] trait. +/// +/// This macro also implements the [`HasWork`] trait, so you do not need to use [`impl_has_work!`] +/// when using this macro. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use kernel::sync::Arc; +/// use kernel::workqueue::{self, impl_has_delayed_work, DelayedWork}; +/// +/// struct MyStruct<'a, T, const N: usize> { +/// work_field: DelayedWork<MyStruct<'a, T, N>, 17>, +/// f: fn(&'a [T; N]), +/// } +/// +/// impl_has_delayed_work! { +/// impl{'a, T, const N: usize} HasDelayedWork<MyStruct<'a, T, N>, 17> +/// for MyStruct<'a, T, N> { self.work_field } +/// } +/// ``` +#[macro_export] +macro_rules! impl_has_delayed_work { + ($(impl$({$($generics:tt)*})? + HasDelayedWork<$work_type:ty $(, $id:tt)?> + for $self:ty + { self.$field:ident } + )*) => {$( + // SAFETY: The implementation of `raw_get_work` only compiles if the field has the right + // type. + unsafe impl$(<$($generics)+>)? + $crate::workqueue::HasDelayedWork<$work_type $(, $id)?> for $self {} + + // SAFETY: The implementation of `raw_get_work` only compiles if the field has the right + // type. + unsafe impl$(<$($generics)+>)? $crate::workqueue::HasWork<$work_type $(, $id)?> for $self { + #[inline] + unsafe fn raw_get_work( + ptr: *mut Self + ) -> *mut $crate::workqueue::Work<$work_type $(, $id)?> { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is not dangling. + let ptr: *mut $crate::workqueue::DelayedWork<$work_type $(, $id)?> = unsafe { + ::core::ptr::addr_of_mut!((*ptr).$field) + }; + + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer is not dangling. + unsafe { $crate::workqueue::DelayedWork::raw_as_work(ptr) } + } + + #[inline] + unsafe fn work_container_of( + ptr: *mut $crate::workqueue::Work<$work_type $(, $id)?>, + ) -> *mut Self { + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer points at a field of the right type + // in the right kind of struct. + let ptr = unsafe { $crate::workqueue::Work::raw_get(ptr) }; + + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer points at a field of the right type + // in the right kind of struct. + let delayed_work = unsafe { + $crate::container_of!(ptr, $crate::bindings::delayed_work, work) + }; + + let delayed_work: *mut $crate::workqueue::DelayedWork<$work_type $(, $id)?> = + delayed_work.cast(); + + // SAFETY: The caller promises that the pointer points at a field of the right type + // in the right kind of struct. + unsafe { $crate::container_of!(delayed_work, Self, $field) } + } + } + )*}; +} +pub use impl_has_delayed_work; + +// SAFETY: The `__enqueue` implementation in RawWorkItem uses a `work_struct` initialized with the +// `run` method of this trait as the function pointer because: +// - `__enqueue` gets the `work_struct` from the `Work` field, using `T::raw_get_work`. +// - The only safe way to create a `Work` object is through `Work::new`. +// - `Work::new` makes sure that `T::Pointer::run` is passed to `init_work_with_key`. +// - Finally `Work` and `RawWorkItem` guarantee that the correct `Work` field +// will be used because of the ID const generic bound. This makes sure that `T::raw_get_work` +// uses the correct offset for the `Work` field, and `Work::new` picks the correct +// implementation of `WorkItemPointer` for `Arc<T>`. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> WorkItemPointer<ID> for Arc<T> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasWork<T, ID>, +{ + unsafe extern "C" fn run(ptr: *mut bindings::work_struct) { + // The `__enqueue` method always uses a `work_struct` stored in a `Work<T, ID>`. + let ptr = ptr.cast::<Work<T, ID>>(); + // SAFETY: This computes the pointer that `__enqueue` got from `Arc::into_raw`. + let ptr = unsafe { T::work_container_of(ptr) }; + // SAFETY: This pointer comes from `Arc::into_raw` and we've been given back ownership. + let arc = unsafe { Arc::from_raw(ptr) }; + + T::run(arc) + } +} + +// SAFETY: The `work_struct` raw pointer is guaranteed to be valid for the duration of the call to +// the closure because we get it from an `Arc`, which means that the ref count will be at least 1, +// and we don't drop the `Arc` ourselves. If `queue_work_on` returns true, it is further guaranteed +// to be valid until a call to the function pointer in `work_struct` because we leak the memory it +// points to, and only reclaim it if the closure returns false, or in `WorkItemPointer::run`, which +// is what the function pointer in the `work_struct` must be pointing to, according to the safety +// requirements of `WorkItemPointer`. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> RawWorkItem<ID> for Arc<T> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasWork<T, ID>, +{ + type EnqueueOutput = Result<(), Self>; + + unsafe fn __enqueue<F>(self, queue_work_on: F) -> Self::EnqueueOutput + where + F: FnOnce(*mut bindings::work_struct) -> bool, + { + // Casting between const and mut is not a problem as long as the pointer is a raw pointer. + let ptr = Arc::into_raw(self).cast_mut(); + + // SAFETY: Pointers into an `Arc` point at a valid value. + let work_ptr = unsafe { T::raw_get_work(ptr) }; + // SAFETY: `raw_get_work` returns a pointer to a valid value. + let work_ptr = unsafe { Work::raw_get(work_ptr) }; + + if queue_work_on(work_ptr) { + Ok(()) + } else { + // SAFETY: The work queue has not taken ownership of the pointer. + Err(unsafe { Arc::from_raw(ptr) }) + } + } +} + +// SAFETY: By the safety requirements of `HasDelayedWork`, the `work_struct` returned by methods in +// `HasWork` provides a `work_struct` that is the `work` field of a `delayed_work`, and the rest of +// the `delayed_work` has the same access rules as its `work` field. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> RawDelayedWorkItem<ID> for Arc<T> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasDelayedWork<T, ID>, +{ +} + +// SAFETY: TODO. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> WorkItemPointer<ID> for Pin<KBox<T>> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasWork<T, ID>, +{ + unsafe extern "C" fn run(ptr: *mut bindings::work_struct) { + // The `__enqueue` method always uses a `work_struct` stored in a `Work<T, ID>`. + let ptr = ptr.cast::<Work<T, ID>>(); + // SAFETY: This computes the pointer that `__enqueue` got from `Arc::into_raw`. + let ptr = unsafe { T::work_container_of(ptr) }; + // SAFETY: This pointer comes from `Arc::into_raw` and we've been given back ownership. + let boxed = unsafe { KBox::from_raw(ptr) }; + // SAFETY: The box was already pinned when it was enqueued. + let pinned = unsafe { Pin::new_unchecked(boxed) }; + + T::run(pinned) + } +} + +// SAFETY: TODO. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> RawWorkItem<ID> for Pin<KBox<T>> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasWork<T, ID>, +{ + type EnqueueOutput = (); + + unsafe fn __enqueue<F>(self, queue_work_on: F) -> Self::EnqueueOutput + where + F: FnOnce(*mut bindings::work_struct) -> bool, + { + // SAFETY: We're not going to move `self` or any of its fields, so its okay to temporarily + // remove the `Pin` wrapper. + let boxed = unsafe { Pin::into_inner_unchecked(self) }; + let ptr = KBox::into_raw(boxed); + + // SAFETY: Pointers into a `KBox` point at a valid value. + let work_ptr = unsafe { T::raw_get_work(ptr) }; + // SAFETY: `raw_get_work` returns a pointer to a valid value. + let work_ptr = unsafe { Work::raw_get(work_ptr) }; + + if !queue_work_on(work_ptr) { + // SAFETY: This method requires exclusive ownership of the box, so it cannot be in a + // workqueue. + unsafe { ::core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } + } + } +} + +// SAFETY: By the safety requirements of `HasDelayedWork`, the `work_struct` returned by methods in +// `HasWork` provides a `work_struct` that is the `work` field of a `delayed_work`, and the rest of +// the `delayed_work` has the same access rules as its `work` field. +unsafe impl<T, const ID: u64> RawDelayedWorkItem<ID> for Pin<KBox<T>> +where + T: WorkItem<ID, Pointer = Self>, + T: HasDelayedWork<T, ID>, +{ +} + +/// Returns the system work queue (`system_wq`). +/// +/// It is the one used by `schedule[_delayed]_work[_on]()`. Multi-CPU multi-threaded. There are +/// users which expect relatively short queue flush time. +/// +/// Callers shouldn't queue work items which can run for too long. +pub fn system() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system high-priority work queue (`system_highpri_wq`). +/// +/// It is similar to the one returned by [`system`] but for work items which require higher +/// scheduling priority. +pub fn system_highpri() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_highpri_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_highpri_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system work queue for potentially long-running work items (`system_long_wq`). +/// +/// It is similar to the one returned by [`system`] but may host long running work items. Queue +/// flushing might take relatively long. +pub fn system_long() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_long_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_long_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system unbound work queue (`system_unbound_wq`). +/// +/// Workers are not bound to any specific CPU, not concurrency managed, and all queued work items +/// are executed immediately as long as `max_active` limit is not reached and resources are +/// available. +pub fn system_unbound() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_unbound_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_unbound_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system freezable work queue (`system_freezable_wq`). +/// +/// It is equivalent to the one returned by [`system`] except that it's freezable. +/// +/// A freezable workqueue participates in the freeze phase of the system suspend operations. Work +/// items on the workqueue are drained and no new work item starts execution until thawed. +pub fn system_freezable() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_freezable_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_freezable_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system power-efficient work queue (`system_power_efficient_wq`). +/// +/// It is inclined towards saving power and is converted to "unbound" variants if the +/// `workqueue.power_efficient` kernel parameter is specified; otherwise, it is similar to the one +/// returned by [`system`]. +pub fn system_power_efficient() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_power_efficient_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_power_efficient_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system freezable power-efficient work queue (`system_freezable_power_efficient_wq`). +/// +/// It is similar to the one returned by [`system_power_efficient`] except that is freezable. +/// +/// A freezable workqueue participates in the freeze phase of the system suspend operations. Work +/// items on the workqueue are drained and no new work item starts execution until thawed. +pub fn system_freezable_power_efficient() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_freezable_power_efficient_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_freezable_power_efficient_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system bottom halves work queue (`system_bh_wq`). +/// +/// It is similar to the one returned by [`system`] but for work items which +/// need to run from a softirq context. +pub fn system_bh() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_bh_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_bh_wq) } +} + +/// Returns the system bottom halves high-priority work queue (`system_bh_highpri_wq`). +/// +/// It is similar to the one returned by [`system_bh`] but for work items which +/// require higher scheduling priority. +pub fn system_bh_highpri() -> &'static Queue { + // SAFETY: `system_bh_highpri_wq` is a C global, always available. + unsafe { Queue::from_raw(bindings::system_bh_highpri_wq) } +} |
