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linux-next/include/linux/tnum.h
Edward Cree b03c9f9fdc bpf/verifier: track signed and unsigned min/max values
Allows us to, sometimes, combine information from a signed check of one
 bound and an unsigned check of the other.
We now track the full range of possible values, rather than restricting
 ourselves to [0, 1<<30) and considering anything beyond that as
 unknown.  While this is probably not necessary, it makes the code more
 straightforward and symmetrical between signed and unsigned bounds.

Signed-off-by: Edward Cree <ecree@solarflare.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2017-08-08 17:51:34 -07:00

82 lines
2.7 KiB
C

/* tnum: tracked (or tristate) numbers
*
* A tnum tracks knowledge about the bits of a value. Each bit can be either
* known (0 or 1), or unknown (x). Arithmetic operations on tnums will
* propagate the unknown bits such that the tnum result represents all the
* possible results for possible values of the operands.
*/
#include <linux/types.h>
struct tnum {
u64 value;
u64 mask;
};
/* Constructors */
/* Represent a known constant as a tnum. */
struct tnum tnum_const(u64 value);
/* A completely unknown value */
extern const struct tnum tnum_unknown;
/* A value that's unknown except that @min <= value <= @max */
struct tnum tnum_range(u64 min, u64 max);
/* Arithmetic and logical ops */
/* Shift a tnum left (by a fixed shift) */
struct tnum tnum_lshift(struct tnum a, u8 shift);
/* Shift a tnum right (by a fixed shift) */
struct tnum tnum_rshift(struct tnum a, u8 shift);
/* Add two tnums, return @a + @b */
struct tnum tnum_add(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Subtract two tnums, return @a - @b */
struct tnum tnum_sub(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Bitwise-AND, return @a & @b */
struct tnum tnum_and(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Bitwise-OR, return @a | @b */
struct tnum tnum_or(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Bitwise-XOR, return @a ^ @b */
struct tnum tnum_xor(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Multiply two tnums, return @a * @b */
struct tnum tnum_mul(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Return a tnum representing numbers satisfying both @a and @b */
struct tnum tnum_intersect(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Return @a with all but the lowest @size bytes cleared */
struct tnum tnum_cast(struct tnum a, u8 size);
/* Returns true if @a is a known constant */
static inline bool tnum_is_const(struct tnum a)
{
return !a.mask;
}
/* Returns true if @a == tnum_const(@b) */
static inline bool tnum_equals_const(struct tnum a, u64 b)
{
return tnum_is_const(a) && a.value == b;
}
/* Returns true if @a is completely unknown */
static inline bool tnum_is_unknown(struct tnum a)
{
return !~a.mask;
}
/* Returns true if @a is known to be a multiple of @size.
* @size must be a power of two.
*/
bool tnum_is_aligned(struct tnum a, u64 size);
/* Returns true if @b represents a subset of @a. */
bool tnum_in(struct tnum a, struct tnum b);
/* Formatting functions. These have snprintf-like semantics: they will write
* up to @size bytes (including the terminating NUL byte), and return the number
* of bytes (excluding the terminating NUL) which would have been written had
* sufficient space been available. (Thus tnum_sbin always returns 64.)
*/
/* Format a tnum as a pair of hex numbers (value; mask) */
int tnum_strn(char *str, size_t size, struct tnum a);
/* Format a tnum as tristate binary expansion */
int tnum_sbin(char *str, size_t size, struct tnum a);