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93dc3be194
Expand the conditional compilation section to explain how to support other expressions, such as testing whether `RUSTC_VERSION` is at least a given version, which requires a numerical comparison that Rust's `cfg` predicates do not support (yet?). Reviewed-by: Nicolas Schier <nicolas@fjasle.eu> Tested-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com> Acked-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240902165535.1101978-7-ojeda@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
162 lines
6.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
162 lines
6.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
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General Information
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===================
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This document contains useful information to know when working with
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the Rust support in the kernel.
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``no_std``
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----------
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The Rust support in the kernel can link only `core <https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/>`_,
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but not `std <https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/>`_. Crates for use in the
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kernel must opt into this behavior using the ``#![no_std]`` attribute.
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.. _rust_code_documentation:
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Code documentation
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------------------
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Rust kernel code is documented using ``rustdoc``, its built-in documentation
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generator.
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The generated HTML docs include integrated search, linked items (e.g. types,
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functions, constants), source code, etc. They may be read at:
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https://rust.docs.kernel.org
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For linux-next, please see:
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https://rust.docs.kernel.org/next/
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There are also tags for each main release, e.g.:
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https://rust.docs.kernel.org/6.10/
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The docs can also be easily generated and read locally. This is quite fast
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(same order as compiling the code itself) and no special tools or environment
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are needed. This has the added advantage that they will be tailored to
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the particular kernel configuration used. To generate them, use the ``rustdoc``
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target with the same invocation used for compilation, e.g.::
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make LLVM=1 rustdoc
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To read the docs locally in your web browser, run e.g.::
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xdg-open Documentation/output/rust/rustdoc/kernel/index.html
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To learn about how to write the documentation, please see coding-guidelines.rst.
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Extra lints
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-----------
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While ``rustc`` is a very helpful compiler, some extra lints and analyses are
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available via ``clippy``, a Rust linter. To enable it, pass ``CLIPPY=1`` to
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the same invocation used for compilation, e.g.::
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make LLVM=1 CLIPPY=1
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Please note that Clippy may change code generation, thus it should not be
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enabled while building a production kernel.
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Abstractions vs. bindings
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-------------------------
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Abstractions are Rust code wrapping kernel functionality from the C side.
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In order to use functions and types from the C side, bindings are created.
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Bindings are the declarations for Rust of those functions and types from
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the C side.
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For instance, one may write a ``Mutex`` abstraction in Rust which wraps
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a ``struct mutex`` from the C side and calls its functions through the bindings.
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Abstractions are not available for all the kernel internal APIs and concepts,
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but it is intended that coverage is expanded as time goes on. "Leaf" modules
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(e.g. drivers) should not use the C bindings directly. Instead, subsystems
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should provide as-safe-as-possible abstractions as needed.
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.. code-block::
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rust/bindings/
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(rust/helpers/)
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include/ -----+ <-+
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drivers/ rust/kernel/ +----------+ <-+ |
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fs/ | bindgen | |
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.../ +-------------------+ +----------+ --+ |
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| Abstractions | | |
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+---------+ | +------+ +------+ | +----------+ | |
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| my_foo | -----> | | foo | | bar | | -------> | Bindings | <-+ |
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| driver | Safe | | sub- | | sub- | | Unsafe | | |
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+---------+ | |system| |system| | | bindings | <-----+
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| | +------+ +------+ | | crate | |
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| | kernel crate | +----------+ |
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| +-------------------+ |
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+------------------# FORBIDDEN #--------------------------------+
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The main idea is to encapsulate all direct interaction with the kernel's C APIs
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into carefully reviewed and documented abstractions. Then users of these
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abstractions cannot introduce undefined behavior (UB) as long as:
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#. The abstractions are correct ("sound").
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#. Any ``unsafe`` blocks respect the safety contract necessary to call the
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operations inside the block. Similarly, any ``unsafe impl``\ s respect the
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safety contract necessary to implement the trait.
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Bindings
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~~~~~~~~
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By including a C header from ``include/`` into
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``rust/bindings/bindings_helper.h``, the ``bindgen`` tool will auto-generate the
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bindings for the included subsystem. After building, see the ``*_generated.rs``
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output files in the ``rust/bindings/`` directory.
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For parts of the C header that ``bindgen`` does not auto generate, e.g. C
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``inline`` functions or non-trivial macros, it is acceptable to add a small
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wrapper function to ``rust/helpers/`` to make it available for the Rust side as
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well.
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Abstractions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Abstractions are the layer between the bindings and the in-kernel users. They
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are located in ``rust/kernel/`` and their role is to encapsulate the unsafe
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access to the bindings into an as-safe-as-possible API that they expose to their
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users. Users of the abstractions include things like drivers or file systems
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written in Rust.
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Besides the safety aspect, the abstractions are supposed to be "ergonomic", in
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the sense that they turn the C interfaces into "idiomatic" Rust code. Basic
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examples are to turn the C resource acquisition and release into Rust
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constructors and destructors or C integer error codes into Rust's ``Result``\ s.
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Conditional compilation
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-----------------------
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Rust code has access to conditional compilation based on the kernel
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configuration:
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.. code-block:: rust
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#[cfg(CONFIG_X)] // Enabled (`y` or `m`)
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#[cfg(CONFIG_X="y")] // Enabled as a built-in (`y`)
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#[cfg(CONFIG_X="m")] // Enabled as a module (`m`)
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#[cfg(not(CONFIG_X))] // Disabled
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For other predicates that Rust's ``cfg`` does not support, e.g. expressions with
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numerical comparisons, one may define a new Kconfig symbol:
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.. code-block:: kconfig
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config RUSTC_VERSION_MIN_107900
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def_bool y if RUSTC_VERSION >= 107900
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