2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
//! Kernel errors.
//!
//! C header: [`include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h`](../../../include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h)
2022-11-10 19:41:22 +03:00
use alloc ::{
alloc ::{ AllocError , LayoutError } ,
collections ::TryReserveError ,
} ;
use core ::convert ::From ;
use core ::num ::TryFromIntError ;
use core ::str ::Utf8Error ;
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
/// Contains the C-compatible error codes.
pub mod code {
2022-11-10 19:41:20 +03:00
macro_rules ! declare_err {
( $err :tt $(, ) ? $( $doc :expr ) , + ) = > {
$(
#[ doc = $doc ]
) *
pub const $err : super ::Error = super ::Error ( - ( crate ::bindings ::$err as i32 ) ) ;
} ;
}
2022-11-10 19:41:21 +03:00
declare_err! ( EPERM , " Operation not permitted. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOENT , " No such file or directory. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ESRCH , " No such process. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EINTR , " Interrupted system call. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EIO , " I/O error. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENXIO , " No such device or address. " ) ;
declare_err! ( E2BIG , " Argument list too long. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOEXEC , " Exec format error. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EBADF , " Bad file number. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ECHILD , " Exec format error. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EAGAIN , " Try again. " ) ;
2022-11-10 19:41:20 +03:00
declare_err! ( ENOMEM , " Out of memory. " ) ;
2022-11-10 19:41:21 +03:00
declare_err! ( EACCES , " Permission denied. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EFAULT , " Bad address. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOTBLK , " Block device required. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EBUSY , " Device or resource busy. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EEXIST , " File exists. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EXDEV , " Cross-device link. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENODEV , " No such device. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOTDIR , " Not a directory. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EISDIR , " Is a directory. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EINVAL , " Invalid argument. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENFILE , " File table overflow. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EMFILE , " Too many open files. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOTTY , " Not a typewriter. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ETXTBSY , " Text file busy. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EFBIG , " File too large. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ENOSPC , " No space left on device. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ESPIPE , " Illegal seek. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EROFS , " Read-only file system. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EMLINK , " Too many links. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EPIPE , " Broken pipe. " ) ;
declare_err! ( EDOM , " Math argument out of domain of func. " ) ;
declare_err! ( ERANGE , " Math result not representable. " ) ;
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
}
/// Generic integer kernel error.
///
/// The kernel defines a set of integer generic error codes based on C and
/// POSIX ones. These codes may have a more specific meaning in some contexts.
///
/// # Invariants
///
/// The value is a valid `errno` (i.e. `>= -MAX_ERRNO && < 0`).
#[ derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq) ]
pub struct Error ( core ::ffi ::c_int ) ;
impl Error {
2023-04-03 12:48:12 +03:00
/// Creates an [`Error`] from a kernel error code.
///
/// It is a bug to pass an out-of-range `errno`. `EINVAL` would
/// be returned in such a case.
pub ( crate ) fn from_errno ( errno : core ::ffi ::c_int ) -> Error {
if errno < - ( bindings ::MAX_ERRNO as i32 ) | | errno > = 0 {
// TODO: Make it a `WARN_ONCE` once available.
crate ::pr_warn! (
" attempted to create `Error` with out of range `errno`: {} " ,
errno
) ;
return code ::EINVAL ;
}
// INVARIANT: The check above ensures the type invariant
// will hold.
Error ( errno )
}
/// Creates an [`Error`] from a kernel error code.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// `errno` must be within error code range (i.e. `>= -MAX_ERRNO && < 0`).
unsafe fn from_errno_unchecked ( errno : core ::ffi ::c_int ) -> Error {
// INVARIANT: The contract ensures the type invariant
// will hold.
Error ( errno )
}
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
/// Returns the kernel error code.
2023-04-03 12:48:10 +03:00
pub fn to_errno ( self ) -> core ::ffi ::c_int {
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
self . 0
}
2023-04-03 12:48:11 +03:00
/// Returns the error encoded as a pointer.
#[ allow(dead_code) ]
pub ( crate ) fn to_ptr < T > ( self ) -> * mut T {
// SAFETY: self.0 is a valid error due to its invariant.
unsafe { bindings ::ERR_PTR ( self . 0. into ( ) ) as * mut _ }
}
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
}
2022-11-10 19:41:22 +03:00
impl From < AllocError > for Error {
fn from ( _ : AllocError ) -> Error {
code ::ENOMEM
}
}
impl From < TryFromIntError > for Error {
fn from ( _ : TryFromIntError ) -> Error {
code ::EINVAL
}
}
impl From < Utf8Error > for Error {
fn from ( _ : Utf8Error ) -> Error {
code ::EINVAL
}
}
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
impl From < TryReserveError > for Error {
fn from ( _ : TryReserveError ) -> Error {
code ::ENOMEM
}
}
2022-11-10 19:41:22 +03:00
impl From < LayoutError > for Error {
fn from ( _ : LayoutError ) -> Error {
code ::ENOMEM
}
}
impl From < core ::fmt ::Error > for Error {
fn from ( _ : core ::fmt ::Error ) -> Error {
code ::EINVAL
}
}
impl From < core ::convert ::Infallible > for Error {
fn from ( e : core ::convert ::Infallible ) -> Error {
match e { }
}
}
2022-02-11 22:25:34 +03:00
/// A [`Result`] with an [`Error`] error type.
///
/// To be used as the return type for functions that may fail.
///
/// # Error codes in C and Rust
///
/// In C, it is common that functions indicate success or failure through
/// their return value; modifying or returning extra data through non-`const`
/// pointer parameters. In particular, in the kernel, functions that may fail
/// typically return an `int` that represents a generic error code. We model
/// those as [`Error`].
///
/// In Rust, it is idiomatic to model functions that may fail as returning
/// a [`Result`]. Since in the kernel many functions return an error code,
/// [`Result`] is a type alias for a [`core::result::Result`] that uses
/// [`Error`] as its error type.
///
/// Note that even if a function does not return anything when it succeeds,
/// it should still be modeled as returning a `Result` rather than
/// just an [`Error`].
pub type Result < T = ( ) > = core ::result ::Result < T , Error > ;
2023-04-03 12:48:13 +03:00
/// Converts an integer as returned by a C kernel function to an error if it's negative, and
/// `Ok(())` otherwise.
pub fn to_result ( err : core ::ffi ::c_int ) -> Result {
if err < 0 {
Err ( Error ::from_errno ( err ) )
} else {
Ok ( ( ) )
}
}
2023-04-03 12:48:14 +03:00
/// Transform a kernel "error pointer" to a normal pointer.
///
/// Some kernel C API functions return an "error pointer" which optionally
/// embeds an `errno`. Callers are supposed to check the returned pointer
/// for errors. This function performs the check and converts the "error pointer"
/// to a normal pointer in an idiomatic fashion.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// # use kernel::from_err_ptr;
/// # use kernel::bindings;
/// fn devm_platform_ioremap_resource(
/// pdev: &mut PlatformDevice,
/// index: u32,
/// ) -> Result<*mut core::ffi::c_void> {
/// // SAFETY: FFI call.
/// unsafe {
/// from_err_ptr(bindings::devm_platform_ioremap_resource(
/// pdev.to_ptr(),
/// index,
/// ))
/// }
/// }
/// ```
// TODO: Remove `dead_code` marker once an in-kernel client is available.
#[ allow(dead_code) ]
pub ( crate ) fn from_err_ptr < T > ( ptr : * mut T ) -> Result < * mut T > {
// CAST: Casting a pointer to `*const core::ffi::c_void` is always valid.
let const_ptr : * const core ::ffi ::c_void = ptr . cast ( ) ;
// SAFETY: The FFI function does not deref the pointer.
if unsafe { bindings ::IS_ERR ( const_ptr ) } {
// SAFETY: The FFI function does not deref the pointer.
let err = unsafe { bindings ::PTR_ERR ( const_ptr ) } ;
// CAST: If `IS_ERR()` returns `true`,
// then `PTR_ERR()` is guaranteed to return a
// negative value greater-or-equal to `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`,
// which always fits in an `i16`, as per the invariant above.
// And an `i16` always fits in an `i32`. So casting `err` to
// an `i32` can never overflow, and is always valid.
//
// SAFETY: `IS_ERR()` ensures `err` is a
// negative value greater-or-equal to `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`.
#[ allow(clippy::unnecessary_cast) ]
return Err ( unsafe { Error ::from_errno_unchecked ( err as core ::ffi ::c_int ) } ) ;
}
Ok ( ptr )
}
2023-04-03 12:48:15 +03:00
/// Calls a closure returning a [`crate::error::Result<T>`] and converts the result to
/// a C integer result.
///
/// This is useful when calling Rust functions that return [`crate::error::Result<T>`]
/// from inside `extern "C"` functions that need to return an integer error result.
///
/// `T` should be convertible from an `i16` via `From<i16>`.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// # use kernel::from_result;
/// # use kernel::bindings;
/// unsafe extern "C" fn probe_callback(
/// pdev: *mut bindings::platform_device,
/// ) -> core::ffi::c_int {
/// from_result(|| {
/// let ptr = devm_alloc(pdev)?;
/// bindings::platform_set_drvdata(pdev, ptr);
/// Ok(0)
/// })
/// }
/// ```
// TODO: Remove `dead_code` marker once an in-kernel client is available.
#[ allow(dead_code) ]
pub ( crate ) fn from_result < T , F > ( f : F ) -> T
where
T : From < i16 > ,
F : FnOnce ( ) -> Result < T > ,
{
match f ( ) {
Ok ( v ) = > v ,
// NO-OVERFLOW: negative `errno`s are no smaller than `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`,
// `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO` fits in an `i16` as per invariant above,
// therefore a negative `errno` always fits in an `i16` and will not overflow.
Err ( e ) = > T ::from ( e . to_errno ( ) as i16 ) ,
}
}