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linux/rust/kernel/device.rs
Remo Senekowitsch d3393e8450 rust: device: Move property_present() to FwNode
The new FwNode abstraction will be used for accessing all device
properties.

It would be possible to duplicate the methods on the device itself, but
since some of the methods on Device would have different type sigatures
as the ones on FwNode, this would only lead to inconsistency and
confusion. For this reason, property_present is removed from Device and
existing users are updated.

Acked-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Remo Senekowitsch <remo@buenzli.dev>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250611102908.212514-4-remo@buenzli.dev
Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
2025-06-13 00:58:52 +02:00

570 lines
19 KiB
Rust

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
//! Generic devices that are part of the kernel's driver model.
//!
//! C header: [`include/linux/device.h`](srctree/include/linux/device.h)
use crate::{
bindings,
types::{ARef, Opaque},
};
use core::{fmt, marker::PhantomData, ptr};
#[cfg(CONFIG_PRINTK)]
use crate::c_str;
pub mod property;
/// A reference-counted device.
///
/// This structure represents the Rust abstraction for a C `struct device`. This implementation
/// abstracts the usage of an already existing C `struct device` within Rust code that we get
/// passed from the C side.
///
/// An instance of this abstraction can be obtained temporarily or permanent.
///
/// A temporary one is bound to the lifetime of the C `struct device` pointer used for creation.
/// A permanent instance is always reference-counted and hence not restricted by any lifetime
/// boundaries.
///
/// For subsystems it is recommended to create a permanent instance to wrap into a subsystem
/// specific device structure (e.g. `pci::Device`). This is useful for passing it to drivers in
/// `T::probe()`, such that a driver can store the `ARef<Device>` (equivalent to storing a
/// `struct device` pointer in a C driver) for arbitrary purposes, e.g. allocating DMA coherent
/// memory.
///
/// # Invariants
///
/// A `Device` instance represents a valid `struct device` created by the C portion of the kernel.
///
/// Instances of this type are always reference-counted, that is, a call to `get_device` ensures
/// that the allocation remains valid at least until the matching call to `put_device`.
///
/// `bindings::device::release` is valid to be called from any thread, hence `ARef<Device>` can be
/// dropped from any thread.
#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct Device<Ctx: DeviceContext = Normal>(Opaque<bindings::device>, PhantomData<Ctx>);
impl Device {
/// Creates a new reference-counted abstraction instance of an existing `struct device` pointer.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// Callers must ensure that `ptr` is valid, non-null, and has a non-zero reference count,
/// i.e. it must be ensured that the reference count of the C `struct device` `ptr` points to
/// can't drop to zero, for the duration of this function call.
///
/// It must also be ensured that `bindings::device::release` can be called from any thread.
/// While not officially documented, this should be the case for any `struct device`.
pub unsafe fn get_device(ptr: *mut bindings::device) -> ARef<Self> {
// SAFETY: By the safety requirements ptr is valid
unsafe { Self::as_ref(ptr) }.into()
}
}
impl<Ctx: DeviceContext> Device<Ctx> {
/// Obtain the raw `struct device *`.
pub(crate) fn as_raw(&self) -> *mut bindings::device {
self.0.get()
}
/// Returns a reference to the parent device, if any.
#[cfg_attr(not(CONFIG_AUXILIARY_BUS), expect(dead_code))]
pub(crate) fn parent(&self) -> Option<&Self> {
// SAFETY:
// - By the type invariant `self.as_raw()` is always valid.
// - The parent device is only ever set at device creation.
let parent = unsafe { (*self.as_raw()).parent };
if parent.is_null() {
None
} else {
// SAFETY:
// - Since `parent` is not NULL, it must be a valid pointer to a `struct device`.
// - `parent` is valid for the lifetime of `self`, since a `struct device` holds a
// reference count of its parent.
Some(unsafe { Self::as_ref(parent) })
}
}
/// Convert a raw C `struct device` pointer to a `&'a Device`.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// Callers must ensure that `ptr` is valid, non-null, and has a non-zero reference count,
/// i.e. it must be ensured that the reference count of the C `struct device` `ptr` points to
/// can't drop to zero, for the duration of this function call and the entire duration when the
/// returned reference exists.
pub unsafe fn as_ref<'a>(ptr: *mut bindings::device) -> &'a Self {
// SAFETY: Guaranteed by the safety requirements of the function.
unsafe { &*ptr.cast() }
}
/// Prints an emergency-level message (level 0) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_emerg`].
///
/// [`dev_emerg`]: crate::dev_emerg
pub fn pr_emerg(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_EMERG, args) };
}
/// Prints an alert-level message (level 1) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_alert`].
///
/// [`dev_alert`]: crate::dev_alert
pub fn pr_alert(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_ALERT, args) };
}
/// Prints a critical-level message (level 2) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_crit`].
///
/// [`dev_crit`]: crate::dev_crit
pub fn pr_crit(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_CRIT, args) };
}
/// Prints an error-level message (level 3) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_err`].
///
/// [`dev_err`]: crate::dev_err
pub fn pr_err(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_ERR, args) };
}
/// Prints a warning-level message (level 4) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_warn`].
///
/// [`dev_warn`]: crate::dev_warn
pub fn pr_warn(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_WARNING, args) };
}
/// Prints a notice-level message (level 5) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_notice`].
///
/// [`dev_notice`]: crate::dev_notice
pub fn pr_notice(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_NOTICE, args) };
}
/// Prints an info-level message (level 6) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_info`].
///
/// [`dev_info`]: crate::dev_info
pub fn pr_info(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_INFO, args) };
}
/// Prints a debug-level message (level 7) prefixed with device information.
///
/// More details are available from [`dev_dbg`].
///
/// [`dev_dbg`]: crate::dev_dbg
pub fn pr_dbg(&self, args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
if cfg!(debug_assertions) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated, uses one of the kernel constants.
unsafe { self.printk(bindings::KERN_DEBUG, args) };
}
}
/// Prints the provided message to the console.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// Callers must ensure that `klevel` is null-terminated; in particular, one of the
/// `KERN_*`constants, for example, `KERN_CRIT`, `KERN_ALERT`, etc.
#[cfg_attr(not(CONFIG_PRINTK), allow(unused_variables))]
unsafe fn printk(&self, klevel: &[u8], msg: fmt::Arguments<'_>) {
// SAFETY: `klevel` is null-terminated and one of the kernel constants. `self.as_raw`
// is valid because `self` is valid. The "%pA" format string expects a pointer to
// `fmt::Arguments`, which is what we're passing as the last argument.
#[cfg(CONFIG_PRINTK)]
unsafe {
bindings::_dev_printk(
klevel as *const _ as *const crate::ffi::c_char,
self.as_raw(),
c_str!("%pA").as_char_ptr(),
&msg as *const _ as *const crate::ffi::c_void,
)
};
}
/// Obtain the [`FwNode`](property::FwNode) corresponding to this [`Device`].
pub fn fwnode(&self) -> Option<&property::FwNode> {
// SAFETY: `self` is valid.
let fwnode_handle = unsafe { bindings::__dev_fwnode(self.as_raw()) };
if fwnode_handle.is_null() {
return None;
}
// SAFETY: `fwnode_handle` is valid. Its lifetime is tied to `&self`. We
// return a reference instead of an `ARef<FwNode>` because `dev_fwnode()`
// doesn't increment the refcount. It is safe to cast from a
// `struct fwnode_handle*` to a `*const FwNode` because `FwNode` is
// defined as a `#[repr(transparent)]` wrapper around `fwnode_handle`.
Some(unsafe { &*fwnode_handle.cast() })
}
}
// SAFETY: `Device` is a transparent wrapper of a type that doesn't depend on `Device`'s generic
// argument.
kernel::impl_device_context_deref!(unsafe { Device });
kernel::impl_device_context_into_aref!(Device);
// SAFETY: Instances of `Device` are always reference-counted.
unsafe impl crate::types::AlwaysRefCounted for Device {
fn inc_ref(&self) {
// SAFETY: The existence of a shared reference guarantees that the refcount is non-zero.
unsafe { bindings::get_device(self.as_raw()) };
}
unsafe fn dec_ref(obj: ptr::NonNull<Self>) {
// SAFETY: The safety requirements guarantee that the refcount is non-zero.
unsafe { bindings::put_device(obj.cast().as_ptr()) }
}
}
// SAFETY: As by the type invariant `Device` can be sent to any thread.
unsafe impl Send for Device {}
// SAFETY: `Device` can be shared among threads because all immutable methods are protected by the
// synchronization in `struct device`.
unsafe impl Sync for Device {}
/// Marker trait for the context of a bus specific device.
///
/// Some functions of a bus specific device should only be called from a certain context, i.e. bus
/// callbacks, such as `probe()`.
///
/// This is the marker trait for structures representing the context of a bus specific device.
pub trait DeviceContext: private::Sealed {}
/// The [`Normal`] context is the context of a bus specific device when it is not an argument of
/// any bus callback.
pub struct Normal;
/// The [`Core`] context is the context of a bus specific device when it is supplied as argument of
/// any of the bus callbacks, such as `probe()`.
pub struct Core;
/// The [`Bound`] context is the context of a bus specific device reference when it is guaranteed to
/// be bound for the duration of its lifetime.
pub struct Bound;
mod private {
pub trait Sealed {}
impl Sealed for super::Bound {}
impl Sealed for super::Core {}
impl Sealed for super::Normal {}
}
impl DeviceContext for Bound {}
impl DeviceContext for Core {}
impl DeviceContext for Normal {}
/// # Safety
///
/// The type given as `$device` must be a transparent wrapper of a type that doesn't depend on the
/// generic argument of `$device`.
#[doc(hidden)]
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! __impl_device_context_deref {
(unsafe { $device:ident, $src:ty => $dst:ty }) => {
impl ::core::ops::Deref for $device<$src> {
type Target = $device<$dst>;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
let ptr: *const Self = self;
// CAST: `$device<$src>` and `$device<$dst>` transparently wrap the same type by the
// safety requirement of the macro.
let ptr = ptr.cast::<Self::Target>();
// SAFETY: `ptr` was derived from `&self`.
unsafe { &*ptr }
}
}
};
}
/// Implement [`core::ops::Deref`] traits for allowed [`DeviceContext`] conversions of a (bus
/// specific) device.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The type given as `$device` must be a transparent wrapper of a type that doesn't depend on the
/// generic argument of `$device`.
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! impl_device_context_deref {
(unsafe { $device:ident }) => {
// SAFETY: This macro has the exact same safety requirement as
// `__impl_device_context_deref!`.
::kernel::__impl_device_context_deref!(unsafe {
$device,
$crate::device::Core => $crate::device::Bound
});
// SAFETY: This macro has the exact same safety requirement as
// `__impl_device_context_deref!`.
::kernel::__impl_device_context_deref!(unsafe {
$device,
$crate::device::Bound => $crate::device::Normal
});
};
}
#[doc(hidden)]
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! __impl_device_context_into_aref {
($src:ty, $device:tt) => {
impl ::core::convert::From<&$device<$src>> for $crate::types::ARef<$device> {
fn from(dev: &$device<$src>) -> Self {
(&**dev).into()
}
}
};
}
/// Implement [`core::convert::From`], such that all `&Device<Ctx>` can be converted to an
/// `ARef<Device>`.
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! impl_device_context_into_aref {
($device:tt) => {
::kernel::__impl_device_context_into_aref!($crate::device::Core, $device);
::kernel::__impl_device_context_into_aref!($crate::device::Bound, $device);
};
}
#[doc(hidden)]
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_printk {
($method:ident, $dev:expr, $($f:tt)*) => {
{
($dev).$method(::core::format_args!($($f)*));
}
}
}
/// Prints an emergency-level message (level 0) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used if the system is unusable.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_emerg` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_emerg!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_emerg {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_emerg, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints an alert-level message (level 1) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used if action must be taken immediately.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_alert` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_alert!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_alert {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_alert, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints a critical-level message (level 2) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used in critical conditions.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_crit` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_crit!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_crit {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_crit, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints an error-level message (level 3) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used in error conditions.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_err` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_err!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_err {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_err, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints a warning-level message (level 4) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used in warning conditions.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_warn` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_warn!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_warn {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_warn, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints a notice-level message (level 5) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used in normal but significant conditions.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_notice` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_notice!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_notice {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_notice, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints an info-level message (level 6) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used for informational messages.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_info` macro.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_info!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_info {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_info, $($f)*); }
}
/// Prints a debug-level message (level 7) prefixed with device information.
///
/// This level should be used for debug messages.
///
/// Equivalent to the kernel's `dev_dbg` macro, except that it doesn't support dynamic debug yet.
///
/// Mimics the interface of [`std::print!`]. More information about the syntax is available from
/// [`core::fmt`] and [`std::format!`].
///
/// [`std::print!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.print.html
/// [`std::format!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/macro.format.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use kernel::device::Device;
///
/// fn example(dev: &Device) {
/// dev_dbg!(dev, "hello {}\n", "there");
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! dev_dbg {
($($f:tt)*) => { $crate::dev_printk!(pr_dbg, $($f)*); }
}