1

rust: Implement the smart pointer InPlaceInit for Arc

For pinned and unpinned initialization of structs, a trait named
`InPlaceInit` exists for uniform access. `Arc` did not implement
`InPlaceInit` yet, although the functions already existed. The main
reason for that, was that the trait itself returned a `Pin<Self>`. The
`Arc` implementation of the kernel is already implicitly pinned.

To enable `Arc` to implement `InPlaceInit` and to have uniform access,
for in-place and pinned in-place initialization, an associated type is
introduced for `InPlaceInit`. The new implementation of `InPlaceInit`
for `Arc` sets `Arc` as the associated type. Older implementations use
an explicit `Pin<T>` as the associated type. The implemented methods for
`Arc` are mostly moved from a direct implementation on `Arc`. There
should be no user impact. The implementation for `ListArc` is omitted,
because it is not merged yet.

Link: https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/1079
Signed-off-by: Alex Mantel <alexmantel93@mailbox.org>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Benno Lossin <benno.lossin@proton.me>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240727042442.682109-1-alexmantel93@mailbox.org
[ Removed "Rusts" (Benno). - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Alex Mantel 2024-07-26 21:24:42 -07:00 committed by Miguel Ojeda
parent 47ac09b91b
commit 08f983a55c
2 changed files with 38 additions and 28 deletions

View File

@ -213,6 +213,7 @@
use crate::{
alloc::{box_ext::BoxExt, AllocError, Flags},
error::{self, Error},
sync::Arc,
sync::UniqueArc,
types::{Opaque, ScopeGuard},
};
@ -1107,11 +1108,17 @@ unsafe impl<T, E> PinInit<T, E> for T {
/// Smart pointer that can initialize memory in-place.
pub trait InPlaceInit<T>: Sized {
/// Pinned version of `Self`.
///
/// If a type already implicitly pins its pointee, `Pin<Self>` is unnecessary. In this case use
/// `Self`, otherwise just use `Pin<Self>`.
type PinnedSelf;
/// Use the given pin-initializer to pin-initialize a `T` inside of a new smart pointer of this
/// type.
///
/// If `T: !Unpin` it will not be able to move afterwards.
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Pin<Self>, E>
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Self::PinnedSelf, E>
where
E: From<AllocError>;
@ -1119,7 +1126,7 @@ pub trait InPlaceInit<T>: Sized {
/// type.
///
/// If `T: !Unpin` it will not be able to move afterwards.
fn pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> error::Result<Pin<Self>>
fn pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> error::Result<Self::PinnedSelf>
where
Error: From<E>,
{
@ -1148,9 +1155,31 @@ pub trait InPlaceInit<T>: Sized {
}
}
impl<T> InPlaceInit<T> for Box<T> {
impl<T> InPlaceInit<T> for Arc<T> {
type PinnedSelf = Self;
#[inline]
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Pin<Self>, E>
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Self::PinnedSelf, E>
where
E: From<AllocError>,
{
UniqueArc::try_pin_init(init, flags).map(|u| u.into())
}
#[inline]
fn try_init<E>(init: impl Init<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Self, E>
where
E: From<AllocError>,
{
UniqueArc::try_init(init, flags).map(|u| u.into())
}
}
impl<T> InPlaceInit<T> for Box<T> {
type PinnedSelf = Pin<Self>;
#[inline]
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Self::PinnedSelf, E>
where
E: From<AllocError>,
{
@ -1179,8 +1208,10 @@ impl<T> InPlaceInit<T> for Box<T> {
}
impl<T> InPlaceInit<T> for UniqueArc<T> {
type PinnedSelf = Pin<Self>;
#[inline]
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Pin<Self>, E>
fn try_pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> Result<Self::PinnedSelf, E>
where
E: From<AllocError>,
{

View File

@ -12,12 +12,13 @@
//! 2. It does not support weak references, which allows it to be half the size.
//! 3. It saturates the reference count instead of aborting when it goes over a threshold.
//! 4. It does not provide a `get_mut` method, so the ref counted object is pinned.
//! 5. The object in [`Arc`] is pinned implicitly.
//!
//! [`Arc`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/sync/struct.Arc.html
use crate::{
alloc::{box_ext::BoxExt, AllocError, Flags},
error::{self, Error},
bindings,
init::{self, InPlaceInit, Init, PinInit},
try_init,
types::{ForeignOwnable, Opaque},
@ -209,28 +210,6 @@ impl<T> Arc<T> {
// `Arc` object.
Ok(unsafe { Self::from_inner(Box::leak(inner).into()) })
}
/// Use the given initializer to in-place initialize a `T`.
///
/// If `T: !Unpin` it will not be able to move afterwards.
#[inline]
pub fn pin_init<E>(init: impl PinInit<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> error::Result<Self>
where
Error: From<E>,
{
UniqueArc::pin_init(init, flags).map(|u| u.into())
}
/// Use the given initializer to in-place initialize a `T`.
///
/// This is equivalent to [`Arc<T>::pin_init`], since an [`Arc`] is always pinned.
#[inline]
pub fn init<E>(init: impl Init<T, E>, flags: Flags) -> error::Result<Self>
where
Error: From<E>,
{
UniqueArc::init(init, flags).map(|u| u.into())
}
}
impl<T: ?Sized> Arc<T> {