xref: /linux/rust/kernel/str.rs (revision b06b348e855383ed80e041299f3925cdd7dff3da)
1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2 
3 //! String representations.
4 
5 use crate::{
6     alloc::{flags::*, AllocError, KVec},
7     error::{to_result, Result},
8     fmt::{self, Write},
9     prelude::*,
10 };
11 use core::{
12     marker::PhantomData,
13     ops::{Deref, DerefMut, Index},
14 };
15 
16 pub use crate::prelude::CStr;
17 
18 pub mod parse_int;
19 
20 /// Byte string without UTF-8 validity guarantee.
21 #[repr(transparent)]
22 pub struct BStr([u8]);
23 
24 impl BStr {
25     /// Returns the length of this string.
26     #[inline]
27     pub const fn len(&self) -> usize {
28         self.0.len()
29     }
30 
31     /// Returns `true` if the string is empty.
32     #[inline]
33     pub const fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
34         self.len() == 0
35     }
36 
37     /// Creates a [`BStr`] from a `[u8]`.
38     #[inline]
39     pub const fn from_bytes(bytes: &[u8]) -> &Self {
40         // SAFETY: `BStr` is transparent to `[u8]`.
41         unsafe { &*(core::ptr::from_ref(bytes) as *const BStr) }
42     }
43 
44     /// Strip a prefix from `self`. Delegates to [`slice::strip_prefix`].
45     ///
46     /// # Examples
47     ///
48     /// ```
49     /// # use kernel::b_str;
50     /// assert_eq!(Some(b_str!("bar")), b_str!("foobar").strip_prefix(b_str!("foo")));
51     /// assert_eq!(None, b_str!("foobar").strip_prefix(b_str!("bar")));
52     /// assert_eq!(Some(b_str!("foobar")), b_str!("foobar").strip_prefix(b_str!("")));
53     /// assert_eq!(Some(b_str!("")), b_str!("foobar").strip_prefix(b_str!("foobar")));
54     /// ```
55     pub fn strip_prefix(&self, pattern: impl AsRef<Self>) -> Option<&BStr> {
56         self.deref()
57             .strip_prefix(pattern.as_ref().deref())
58             .map(Self::from_bytes)
59     }
60 }
61 
62 impl fmt::Display for BStr {
63     /// Formats printable ASCII characters, escaping the rest.
64     ///
65     /// ```
66     /// # use kernel::{prelude::fmt, b_str, str::{BStr, CString}};
67     /// let ascii = b_str!("Hello, BStr!");
68     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{ascii}"))?;
69     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "Hello, BStr!".as_bytes());
70     ///
71     /// let non_ascii = b_str!("��");
72     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{non_ascii}"))?;
73     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "\\xf0\\x9f\\xa6\\x80".as_bytes());
74     /// # Ok::<(), kernel::error::Error>(())
75     /// ```
76     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
77         for &b in &self.0 {
78             match b {
79                 // Common escape codes.
80                 b'\t' => f.write_str("\\t")?,
81                 b'\n' => f.write_str("\\n")?,
82                 b'\r' => f.write_str("\\r")?,
83                 // Printable characters.
84                 0x20..=0x7e => f.write_char(b as char)?,
85                 _ => write!(f, "\\x{b:02x}")?,
86             }
87         }
88         Ok(())
89     }
90 }
91 
92 impl fmt::Debug for BStr {
93     /// Formats printable ASCII characters with a double quote on either end,
94     /// escaping the rest.
95     ///
96     /// ```
97     /// # use kernel::{prelude::fmt, b_str, str::{BStr, CString}};
98     /// // Embedded double quotes are escaped.
99     /// let ascii = b_str!("Hello, \"BStr\"!");
100     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{ascii:?}"))?;
101     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "\"Hello, \\\"BStr\\\"!\"".as_bytes());
102     ///
103     /// let non_ascii = b_str!("��");
104     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{non_ascii:?}"))?;
105     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes(), "\"\\xf0\\x9f\\x98\\xba\"".as_bytes());
106     /// # Ok::<(), kernel::error::Error>(())
107     /// ```
108     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
109         f.write_char('"')?;
110         for &b in &self.0 {
111             match b {
112                 // Common escape codes.
113                 b'\t' => f.write_str("\\t")?,
114                 b'\n' => f.write_str("\\n")?,
115                 b'\r' => f.write_str("\\r")?,
116                 // String escape characters.
117                 b'\"' => f.write_str("\\\"")?,
118                 b'\\' => f.write_str("\\\\")?,
119                 // Printable characters.
120                 0x20..=0x7e => f.write_char(b as char)?,
121                 _ => write!(f, "\\x{b:02x}")?,
122             }
123         }
124         f.write_char('"')
125     }
126 }
127 
128 impl Deref for BStr {
129     type Target = [u8];
130 
131     #[inline]
132     fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
133         &self.0
134     }
135 }
136 
137 impl PartialEq for BStr {
138     fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
139         self.deref().eq(other.deref())
140     }
141 }
142 
143 impl<Idx> Index<Idx> for BStr
144 where
145     [u8]: Index<Idx, Output = [u8]>,
146 {
147     type Output = Self;
148 
149     fn index(&self, index: Idx) -> &Self::Output {
150         BStr::from_bytes(&self.0[index])
151     }
152 }
153 
154 impl AsRef<BStr> for [u8] {
155     fn as_ref(&self) -> &BStr {
156         BStr::from_bytes(self)
157     }
158 }
159 
160 impl AsRef<BStr> for BStr {
161     fn as_ref(&self) -> &BStr {
162         self
163     }
164 }
165 
166 /// Creates a new [`BStr`] from a string literal.
167 ///
168 /// `b_str!` converts the supplied string literal to byte string, so non-ASCII
169 /// characters can be included.
170 ///
171 /// # Examples
172 ///
173 /// ```
174 /// # use kernel::b_str;
175 /// # use kernel::str::BStr;
176 /// const MY_BSTR: &BStr = b_str!("My awesome BStr!");
177 /// ```
178 #[macro_export]
179 macro_rules! b_str {
180     ($str:literal) => {{
181         const S: &'static str = $str;
182         const C: &'static $crate::str::BStr = $crate::str::BStr::from_bytes(S.as_bytes());
183         C
184     }};
185 }
186 
187 /// Returns a C pointer to the string.
188 // It is a free function rather than a method on an extension trait because:
189 //
190 // - error[E0379]: functions in trait impls cannot be declared const
191 #[inline]
192 #[expect(clippy::disallowed_methods, reason = "internal implementation")]
193 pub const fn as_char_ptr_in_const_context(c_str: &CStr) -> *const c_char {
194     c_str.as_ptr().cast()
195 }
196 
197 mod private {
198     pub trait Sealed {}
199 
200     impl Sealed for super::CStr {}
201 }
202 
203 /// Extensions to [`CStr`].
204 pub trait CStrExt: private::Sealed {
205     /// Wraps a raw C string pointer.
206     ///
207     /// # Safety
208     ///
209     /// `ptr` must be a valid pointer to a `NUL`-terminated C string, and it must
210     /// last at least `'a`. When `CStr` is alive, the memory pointed by `ptr`
211     /// must not be mutated.
212     // This function exists to paper over the fact that `CStr::from_ptr` takes a `*const
213     // core::ffi::c_char` rather than a `*const crate::ffi::c_char`.
214     unsafe fn from_char_ptr<'a>(ptr: *const c_char) -> &'a Self;
215 
216     /// Creates a mutable [`CStr`] from a `[u8]` without performing any
217     /// additional checks.
218     ///
219     /// # Safety
220     ///
221     /// `bytes` *must* end with a `NUL` byte, and should only have a single
222     /// `NUL` byte (or the string will be truncated).
223     unsafe fn from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(bytes: &mut [u8]) -> &mut Self;
224 
225     /// Returns a C pointer to the string.
226     // This function exists to paper over the fact that `CStr::as_ptr` returns a `*const
227     // core::ffi::c_char` rather than a `*const crate::ffi::c_char`.
228     fn as_char_ptr(&self) -> *const c_char;
229 
230     /// Convert this [`CStr`] into a [`CString`] by allocating memory and
231     /// copying over the string data.
232     fn to_cstring(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError>;
233 
234     /// Converts this [`CStr`] to its ASCII lower case equivalent in-place.
235     ///
236     /// ASCII letters 'A' to 'Z' are mapped to 'a' to 'z',
237     /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
238     ///
239     /// To return a new lowercased value without modifying the existing one, use
240     /// [`to_ascii_lowercase()`].
241     ///
242     /// [`to_ascii_lowercase()`]: #method.to_ascii_lowercase
243     fn make_ascii_lowercase(&mut self);
244 
245     /// Converts this [`CStr`] to its ASCII upper case equivalent in-place.
246     ///
247     /// ASCII letters 'a' to 'z' are mapped to 'A' to 'Z',
248     /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
249     ///
250     /// To return a new uppercased value without modifying the existing one, use
251     /// [`to_ascii_uppercase()`].
252     ///
253     /// [`to_ascii_uppercase()`]: #method.to_ascii_uppercase
254     fn make_ascii_uppercase(&mut self);
255 
256     /// Returns a copy of this [`CString`] where each character is mapped to its
257     /// ASCII lower case equivalent.
258     ///
259     /// ASCII letters 'A' to 'Z' are mapped to 'a' to 'z',
260     /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
261     ///
262     /// To lowercase the value in-place, use [`make_ascii_lowercase`].
263     ///
264     /// [`make_ascii_lowercase`]: str::make_ascii_lowercase
265     fn to_ascii_lowercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError>;
266 
267     /// Returns a copy of this [`CString`] where each character is mapped to its
268     /// ASCII upper case equivalent.
269     ///
270     /// ASCII letters 'a' to 'z' are mapped to 'A' to 'Z',
271     /// but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
272     ///
273     /// To uppercase the value in-place, use [`make_ascii_uppercase`].
274     ///
275     /// [`make_ascii_uppercase`]: str::make_ascii_uppercase
276     fn to_ascii_uppercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError>;
277 }
278 
279 impl fmt::Display for CStr {
280     /// Formats printable ASCII characters, escaping the rest.
281     ///
282     /// ```
283     /// # use kernel::prelude::fmt;
284     /// # use kernel::str::CStr;
285     /// # use kernel::str::CString;
286     /// let penguin = c"��";
287     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{penguin}"))?;
288     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "\\xf0\\x9f\\x90\\xa7\0".as_bytes());
289     ///
290     /// let ascii = c"so \"cool\"";
291     /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{ascii}"))?;
292     /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "so \"cool\"\0".as_bytes());
293     /// # Ok::<(), kernel::error::Error>(())
294     /// ```
295     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
296         for &c in self.to_bytes() {
297             if (0x20..0x7f).contains(&c) {
298                 // Printable character.
299                 f.write_char(c as char)?;
300             } else {
301                 write!(f, "\\x{c:02x}")?;
302             }
303         }
304         Ok(())
305     }
306 }
307 
308 /// Converts a mutable C string to a mutable byte slice.
309 ///
310 /// # Safety
311 ///
312 /// The caller must ensure that the slice ends in a NUL byte and contains no other NUL bytes before
313 /// the borrow ends and the underlying [`CStr`] is used.
314 unsafe fn to_bytes_mut(s: &mut CStr) -> &mut [u8] {
315     // SAFETY: the cast from `&CStr` to `&[u8]` is safe since `CStr` has the same layout as `&[u8]`
316     // (this is technically not guaranteed, but we rely on it here). The pointer dereference is
317     // safe since it comes from a mutable reference which is guaranteed to be valid for writes.
318     unsafe { &mut *(core::ptr::from_mut(s) as *mut [u8]) }
319 }
320 
321 impl CStrExt for CStr {
322     #[inline]
323     #[expect(clippy::disallowed_methods, reason = "internal implementation")]
324     unsafe fn from_char_ptr<'a>(ptr: *const c_char) -> &'a Self {
325         // SAFETY: The safety preconditions are the same as for `CStr::from_ptr`.
326         unsafe { CStr::from_ptr(ptr.cast()) }
327     }
328 
329     #[inline]
330     unsafe fn from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(bytes: &mut [u8]) -> &mut Self {
331         // SAFETY: the cast from `&[u8]` to `&CStr` is safe since the properties of `bytes` are
332         // guaranteed by the safety precondition and `CStr` has the same layout as `&[u8]` (this is
333         // technically not guaranteed, but we rely on it here). The pointer dereference is safe
334         // since it comes from a mutable reference which is guaranteed to be valid for writes.
335         unsafe { &mut *(core::ptr::from_mut(bytes) as *mut CStr) }
336     }
337 
338     #[inline]
339     #[expect(clippy::disallowed_methods, reason = "internal implementation")]
340     fn as_char_ptr(&self) -> *const c_char {
341         self.as_ptr().cast()
342     }
343 
344     fn to_cstring(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> {
345         CString::try_from(self)
346     }
347 
348     fn make_ascii_lowercase(&mut self) {
349         // SAFETY: This doesn't introduce or remove NUL bytes in the C string.
350         unsafe { to_bytes_mut(self) }.make_ascii_lowercase();
351     }
352 
353     fn make_ascii_uppercase(&mut self) {
354         // SAFETY: This doesn't introduce or remove NUL bytes in the C string.
355         unsafe { to_bytes_mut(self) }.make_ascii_uppercase();
356     }
357 
358     fn to_ascii_lowercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> {
359         let mut s = self.to_cstring()?;
360 
361         s.make_ascii_lowercase();
362 
363         Ok(s)
364     }
365 
366     fn to_ascii_uppercase(&self) -> Result<CString, AllocError> {
367         let mut s = self.to_cstring()?;
368 
369         s.make_ascii_uppercase();
370 
371         Ok(s)
372     }
373 }
374 
375 impl AsRef<BStr> for CStr {
376     #[inline]
377     fn as_ref(&self) -> &BStr {
378         BStr::from_bytes(self.to_bytes())
379     }
380 }
381 
382 /// Creates a new [`CStr`] at compile time.
383 ///
384 /// Rust supports C string literals since Rust 1.77, and they should be used instead of this macro
385 /// where possible. This macro exists to allow static *non-literal* C strings to be created at
386 /// compile time. This is most often used in other macros.
387 ///
388 /// # Panics
389 ///
390 /// This macro panics if the operand contains an interior `NUL` byte.
391 ///
392 /// # Examples
393 ///
394 /// ```
395 /// # use kernel::c_str;
396 /// # use kernel::str::CStr;
397 /// // This is allowed, but `c"literal"` should be preferred for literals.
398 /// const BAD: &CStr = c_str!("literal");
399 ///
400 /// // `c_str!` is still needed for static non-literal C strings.
401 /// const GOOD: &CStr = c_str!(concat!(file!(), ":", line!(), ": My CStr!"));
402 /// ```
403 #[macro_export]
404 macro_rules! c_str {
405     // NB: We could write `($str:lit) => compile_error!("use a C string literal instead");` here but
406     // that would trigger when the literal is at the top of several macro expansions. That would be
407     // too limiting to macro authors.
408     ($str:expr) => {{
409         const S: &str = concat!($str, "\0");
410         const C: &$crate::str::CStr = match $crate::str::CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(S.as_bytes()) {
411             Ok(v) => v,
412             Err(_) => panic!("string contains interior NUL"),
413         };
414         C
415     }};
416 }
417 
418 #[kunit_tests(rust_kernel_str)]
419 mod tests {
420     use super::*;
421 
422     impl From<core::ffi::FromBytesWithNulError> for Error {
423         #[inline]
424         fn from(_: core::ffi::FromBytesWithNulError) -> Error {
425             EINVAL
426         }
427     }
428 
429     macro_rules! format {
430         ($($f:tt)*) => ({
431             CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!($($f)*))?.to_str()?
432         })
433     }
434 
435     const ALL_ASCII_CHARS: &str =
436         "\\x01\\x02\\x03\\x04\\x05\\x06\\x07\\x08\\x09\\x0a\\x0b\\x0c\\x0d\\x0e\\x0f\
437         \\x10\\x11\\x12\\x13\\x14\\x15\\x16\\x17\\x18\\x19\\x1a\\x1b\\x1c\\x1d\\x1e\\x1f \
438         !\"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@\
439         ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~\\x7f\
440         \\x80\\x81\\x82\\x83\\x84\\x85\\x86\\x87\\x88\\x89\\x8a\\x8b\\x8c\\x8d\\x8e\\x8f\
441         \\x90\\x91\\x92\\x93\\x94\\x95\\x96\\x97\\x98\\x99\\x9a\\x9b\\x9c\\x9d\\x9e\\x9f\
442         \\xa0\\xa1\\xa2\\xa3\\xa4\\xa5\\xa6\\xa7\\xa8\\xa9\\xaa\\xab\\xac\\xad\\xae\\xaf\
443         \\xb0\\xb1\\xb2\\xb3\\xb4\\xb5\\xb6\\xb7\\xb8\\xb9\\xba\\xbb\\xbc\\xbd\\xbe\\xbf\
444         \\xc0\\xc1\\xc2\\xc3\\xc4\\xc5\\xc6\\xc7\\xc8\\xc9\\xca\\xcb\\xcc\\xcd\\xce\\xcf\
445         \\xd0\\xd1\\xd2\\xd3\\xd4\\xd5\\xd6\\xd7\\xd8\\xd9\\xda\\xdb\\xdc\\xdd\\xde\\xdf\
446         \\xe0\\xe1\\xe2\\xe3\\xe4\\xe5\\xe6\\xe7\\xe8\\xe9\\xea\\xeb\\xec\\xed\\xee\\xef\
447         \\xf0\\xf1\\xf2\\xf3\\xf4\\xf5\\xf6\\xf7\\xf8\\xf9\\xfa\\xfb\\xfc\\xfd\\xfe\\xff";
448 
449     #[test]
450     fn test_cstr_to_str() -> Result {
451         let cstr = c"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80";
452         let checked_str = cstr.to_str()?;
453         assert_eq!(checked_str, "��");
454         Ok(())
455     }
456 
457     #[test]
458     fn test_cstr_to_str_invalid_utf8() -> Result {
459         let cstr = c"\xc3\x28";
460         assert!(cstr.to_str().is_err());
461         Ok(())
462     }
463 
464     #[test]
465     fn test_cstr_display() -> Result {
466         let hello_world = c"hello, world!";
467         assert_eq!(format!("{hello_world}"), "hello, world!");
468         let non_printables = c"\x01\x09\x0a";
469         assert_eq!(format!("{non_printables}"), "\\x01\\x09\\x0a");
470         let non_ascii = c"d\xe9j\xe0 vu";
471         assert_eq!(format!("{non_ascii}"), "d\\xe9j\\xe0 vu");
472         let good_bytes = c"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80";
473         assert_eq!(format!("{good_bytes}"), "\\xf0\\x9f\\xa6\\x80");
474         Ok(())
475     }
476 
477     #[test]
478     fn test_cstr_display_all_bytes() -> Result {
479         let mut bytes: [u8; 256] = [0; 256];
480         // fill `bytes` with [1..=255] + [0]
481         for i in u8::MIN..=u8::MAX {
482             bytes[i as usize] = i.wrapping_add(1);
483         }
484         let cstr = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(&bytes)?;
485         assert_eq!(format!("{cstr}"), ALL_ASCII_CHARS);
486         Ok(())
487     }
488 
489     #[test]
490     fn test_cstr_debug() -> Result {
491         let hello_world = c"hello, world!";
492         assert_eq!(format!("{hello_world:?}"), "\"hello, world!\"");
493         let non_printables = c"\x01\x09\x0a";
494         assert_eq!(format!("{non_printables:?}"), "\"\\x01\\t\\n\"");
495         let non_ascii = c"d\xe9j\xe0 vu";
496         assert_eq!(format!("{non_ascii:?}"), "\"d\\xe9j\\xe0 vu\"");
497         Ok(())
498     }
499 
500     #[test]
501     fn test_bstr_display() -> Result {
502         let hello_world = BStr::from_bytes(b"hello, world!");
503         assert_eq!(format!("{hello_world}"), "hello, world!");
504         let escapes = BStr::from_bytes(b"_\t_\n_\r_\\_\'_\"_");
505         assert_eq!(format!("{escapes}"), "_\\t_\\n_\\r_\\_'_\"_");
506         let others = BStr::from_bytes(b"\x01");
507         assert_eq!(format!("{others}"), "\\x01");
508         let non_ascii = BStr::from_bytes(b"d\xe9j\xe0 vu");
509         assert_eq!(format!("{non_ascii}"), "d\\xe9j\\xe0 vu");
510         let good_bytes = BStr::from_bytes(b"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80");
511         assert_eq!(format!("{good_bytes}"), "\\xf0\\x9f\\xa6\\x80");
512         Ok(())
513     }
514 
515     #[test]
516     fn test_bstr_debug() -> Result {
517         let hello_world = BStr::from_bytes(b"hello, world!");
518         assert_eq!(format!("{hello_world:?}"), "\"hello, world!\"");
519         let escapes = BStr::from_bytes(b"_\t_\n_\r_\\_\'_\"_");
520         assert_eq!(format!("{escapes:?}"), "\"_\\t_\\n_\\r_\\\\_'_\\\"_\"");
521         let others = BStr::from_bytes(b"\x01");
522         assert_eq!(format!("{others:?}"), "\"\\x01\"");
523         let non_ascii = BStr::from_bytes(b"d\xe9j\xe0 vu");
524         assert_eq!(format!("{non_ascii:?}"), "\"d\\xe9j\\xe0 vu\"");
525         let good_bytes = BStr::from_bytes(b"\xf0\x9f\xa6\x80");
526         assert_eq!(format!("{good_bytes:?}"), "\"\\xf0\\x9f\\xa6\\x80\"");
527         Ok(())
528     }
529 }
530 
531 /// Allows formatting of [`fmt::Arguments`] into a raw buffer.
532 ///
533 /// It does not fail if callers write past the end of the buffer so that they can calculate the
534 /// size required to fit everything.
535 ///
536 /// # Invariants
537 ///
538 /// The memory region between `pos` (inclusive) and `end` (exclusive) is valid for writes if `pos`
539 /// is less than `end`.
540 pub struct RawFormatter {
541     // Use `usize` to use `saturating_*` functions.
542     beg: usize,
543     pos: usize,
544     end: usize,
545 }
546 
547 impl RawFormatter {
548     /// Creates a new instance of [`RawFormatter`] with an empty buffer.
549     fn new() -> Self {
550         // INVARIANT: The buffer is empty, so the region that needs to be writable is empty.
551         Self {
552             beg: 0,
553             pos: 0,
554             end: 0,
555         }
556     }
557 
558     /// Creates a new instance of [`RawFormatter`] with the given buffer pointers.
559     ///
560     /// # Safety
561     ///
562     /// If `pos` is less than `end`, then the region between `pos` (inclusive) and `end`
563     /// (exclusive) must be valid for writes for the lifetime of the returned [`RawFormatter`].
564     pub(crate) unsafe fn from_ptrs(pos: *mut u8, end: *mut u8) -> Self {
565         // INVARIANT: The safety requirements guarantee the type invariants.
566         Self {
567             beg: pos as usize,
568             pos: pos as usize,
569             end: end as usize,
570         }
571     }
572 
573     /// Creates a new instance of [`RawFormatter`] with the given buffer.
574     ///
575     /// # Safety
576     ///
577     /// The memory region starting at `buf` and extending for `len` bytes must be valid for writes
578     /// for the lifetime of the returned [`RawFormatter`].
579     pub(crate) unsafe fn from_buffer(buf: *mut u8, len: usize) -> Self {
580         let pos = buf as usize;
581         // INVARIANT: We ensure that `end` is never less than `buf`, and the safety requirements
582         // guarantees that the memory region is valid for writes.
583         Self {
584             pos,
585             beg: pos,
586             end: pos.saturating_add(len),
587         }
588     }
589 
590     /// Returns the current insert position.
591     ///
592     /// N.B. It may point to invalid memory.
593     pub(crate) fn pos(&self) -> *mut u8 {
594         self.pos as *mut u8
595     }
596 
597     /// Returns the number of bytes written to the formatter.
598     pub fn bytes_written(&self) -> usize {
599         self.pos - self.beg
600     }
601 }
602 
603 impl fmt::Write for RawFormatter {
604     fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result {
605         // `pos` value after writing `len` bytes. This does not have to be bounded by `end`, but we
606         // don't want it to wrap around to 0.
607         let pos_new = self.pos.saturating_add(s.len());
608 
609         // Amount that we can copy. `saturating_sub` ensures we get 0 if `pos` goes past `end`.
610         let len_to_copy = core::cmp::min(pos_new, self.end).saturating_sub(self.pos);
611 
612         if len_to_copy > 0 {
613             // SAFETY: If `len_to_copy` is non-zero, then we know `pos` has not gone past `end`
614             // yet, so it is valid for write per the type invariants.
615             unsafe {
616                 core::ptr::copy_nonoverlapping(
617                     s.as_bytes().as_ptr(),
618                     self.pos as *mut u8,
619                     len_to_copy,
620                 )
621             };
622         }
623 
624         self.pos = pos_new;
625         Ok(())
626     }
627 }
628 
629 /// Allows formatting of [`fmt::Arguments`] into a raw buffer.
630 ///
631 /// Fails if callers attempt to write more than will fit in the buffer.
632 pub struct Formatter<'a>(RawFormatter, PhantomData<&'a mut ()>);
633 
634 impl Formatter<'_> {
635     /// Creates a new instance of [`Formatter`] with the given buffer.
636     ///
637     /// # Safety
638     ///
639     /// The memory region starting at `buf` and extending for `len` bytes must be valid for writes
640     /// for the lifetime of the returned [`Formatter`].
641     pub(crate) unsafe fn from_buffer(buf: *mut u8, len: usize) -> Self {
642         // SAFETY: The safety requirements of this function satisfy those of the callee.
643         Self(unsafe { RawFormatter::from_buffer(buf, len) }, PhantomData)
644     }
645 
646     /// Create a new [`Self`] instance.
647     pub fn new(buffer: &mut [u8]) -> Self {
648         // SAFETY: `buffer` is valid for writes for the entire length for
649         // the lifetime of `Self`.
650         unsafe { Formatter::from_buffer(buffer.as_mut_ptr(), buffer.len()) }
651     }
652 }
653 
654 impl Deref for Formatter<'_> {
655     type Target = RawFormatter;
656 
657     fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
658         &self.0
659     }
660 }
661 
662 impl fmt::Write for Formatter<'_> {
663     fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result {
664         self.0.write_str(s)?;
665 
666         // Fail the request if we go past the end of the buffer.
667         if self.0.pos > self.0.end {
668             Err(fmt::Error)
669         } else {
670             Ok(())
671         }
672     }
673 }
674 
675 /// A mutable reference to a byte buffer where a string can be written into.
676 ///
677 /// The buffer will be automatically null terminated after the last written character.
678 ///
679 /// # Invariants
680 ///
681 /// * The first byte of `buffer` is always zero.
682 /// * The length of `buffer` is at least 1.
683 pub struct NullTerminatedFormatter<'a> {
684     buffer: &'a mut [u8],
685 }
686 
687 impl<'a> NullTerminatedFormatter<'a> {
688     /// Create a new [`Self`] instance.
689     pub fn new(buffer: &'a mut [u8]) -> Option<NullTerminatedFormatter<'a>> {
690         *(buffer.first_mut()?) = 0;
691 
692         // INVARIANT:
693         //  - We wrote zero to the first byte above.
694         //  - If buffer was not at least length 1, `buffer.first_mut()` would return None.
695         Some(Self { buffer })
696     }
697 }
698 
699 impl Write for NullTerminatedFormatter<'_> {
700     fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> fmt::Result {
701         let bytes = s.as_bytes();
702         let len = bytes.len();
703 
704         // We want space for a zero. By type invariant, buffer length is always at least 1, so no
705         // underflow.
706         if len > self.buffer.len() - 1 {
707             return Err(fmt::Error);
708         }
709 
710         let buffer = core::mem::take(&mut self.buffer);
711         // We break the zero start invariant for a short while.
712         buffer[..len].copy_from_slice(bytes);
713         // INVARIANT: We checked above that buffer will have size at least 1 after this assignment.
714         self.buffer = &mut buffer[len..];
715 
716         // INVARIANT: We write zero to the first byte of the buffer.
717         self.buffer[0] = 0;
718 
719         Ok(())
720     }
721 }
722 
723 /// # Safety
724 ///
725 /// - `string` must point to a null terminated string that is valid for read.
726 unsafe fn kstrtobool_raw(string: *const u8) -> Result<bool> {
727     let mut result: bool = false;
728 
729     // SAFETY:
730     // - By function safety requirement, `string` is a valid null-terminated string.
731     // - `result` is a valid `bool` that we own.
732     to_result(unsafe { bindings::kstrtobool(string, &mut result) })?;
733     Ok(result)
734 }
735 
736 /// Convert common user inputs into boolean values using the kernel's `kstrtobool` function.
737 ///
738 /// This routine returns `Ok(bool)` if the first character is one of 'YyTt1NnFf0', or
739 /// \[oO\]\[NnFf\] for "on" and "off". Otherwise it will return `Err(EINVAL)`.
740 ///
741 /// # Examples
742 ///
743 /// ```
744 /// # use kernel::str::kstrtobool;
745 ///
746 /// // Lowercase
747 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"true"), Ok(true));
748 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"tr"), Ok(true));
749 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"t"), Ok(true));
750 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"twrong"), Ok(true));
751 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"false"), Ok(false));
752 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"f"), Ok(false));
753 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"yes"), Ok(true));
754 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"no"), Ok(false));
755 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"on"), Ok(true));
756 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"off"), Ok(false));
757 ///
758 /// // Camel case
759 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"True"), Ok(true));
760 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"False"), Ok(false));
761 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"Yes"), Ok(true));
762 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"No"), Ok(false));
763 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"On"), Ok(true));
764 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"Off"), Ok(false));
765 ///
766 /// // All caps
767 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"TRUE"), Ok(true));
768 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"FALSE"), Ok(false));
769 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"YES"), Ok(true));
770 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"NO"), Ok(false));
771 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"ON"), Ok(true));
772 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"OFF"), Ok(false));
773 ///
774 /// // Numeric
775 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"1"), Ok(true));
776 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"0"), Ok(false));
777 ///
778 /// // Invalid input
779 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"invalid"), Err(EINVAL));
780 /// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c"2"), Err(EINVAL));
781 /// ```
782 pub fn kstrtobool(string: &CStr) -> Result<bool> {
783     // SAFETY:
784     // - The pointer returned by `CStr::as_char_ptr` is guaranteed to be
785     //   null terminated.
786     // - `string` is live and thus the string is valid for read.
787     unsafe { kstrtobool_raw(string.as_char_ptr()) }
788 }
789 
790 /// Convert `&[u8]` to `bool` by deferring to [`kernel::str::kstrtobool`].
791 ///
792 /// Only considers at most the first two bytes of `bytes`.
793 pub fn kstrtobool_bytes(bytes: &[u8]) -> Result<bool> {
794     // `ktostrbool` only considers the first two bytes of the input.
795     let stack_string = [*bytes.first().unwrap_or(&0), *bytes.get(1).unwrap_or(&0), 0];
796     // SAFETY: `stack_string` is null terminated and it is live on the stack so
797     // it is valid for read.
798     unsafe { kstrtobool_raw(stack_string.as_ptr()) }
799 }
800 
801 /// An owned string that is guaranteed to have exactly one `NUL` byte, which is at the end.
802 ///
803 /// Used for interoperability with kernel APIs that take C strings.
804 ///
805 /// # Invariants
806 ///
807 /// The string is always `NUL`-terminated and contains no other `NUL` bytes.
808 ///
809 /// # Examples
810 ///
811 /// ```
812 /// use kernel::{str::CString, prelude::fmt};
813 ///
814 /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{}{}{}", "abc", 10, 20))?;
815 /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "abc1020\0".as_bytes());
816 ///
817 /// let tmp = "testing";
818 /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("{tmp}{}", 123))?;
819 /// assert_eq!(s.to_bytes_with_nul(), "testing123\0".as_bytes());
820 ///
821 /// // This fails because it has an embedded `NUL` byte.
822 /// let s = CString::try_from_fmt(fmt!("a\0b{}", 123));
823 /// assert_eq!(s.is_ok(), false);
824 /// # Ok::<(), kernel::error::Error>(())
825 /// ```
826 pub struct CString {
827     buf: KVec<u8>,
828 }
829 
830 impl CString {
831     /// Creates an instance of [`CString`] from the given formatted arguments.
832     pub fn try_from_fmt(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) -> Result<Self, Error> {
833         // Calculate the size needed (formatted string plus `NUL` terminator).
834         let mut f = RawFormatter::new();
835         f.write_fmt(args)?;
836         f.write_str("\0")?;
837         let size = f.bytes_written();
838 
839         // Allocate a vector with the required number of bytes, and write to it.
840         let mut buf = KVec::with_capacity(size, GFP_KERNEL)?;
841         // SAFETY: The buffer stored in `buf` is at least of size `size` and is valid for writes.
842         let mut f = unsafe { Formatter::from_buffer(buf.as_mut_ptr(), size) };
843         f.write_fmt(args)?;
844         f.write_str("\0")?;
845 
846         // SAFETY: The number of bytes that can be written to `f` is bounded by `size`, which is
847         // `buf`'s capacity. The `Formatter` is created with `size` as its limit, and the `?`
848         // operators on `write_fmt` and `write_str` above ensure that if writing exceeds this
849         // limit, an error is returned early. The contents of the buffer have been initialised
850         // by writes to `f`.
851         unsafe { buf.inc_len(f.bytes_written()) };
852 
853         // Check that there are no `NUL` bytes before the end.
854         // SAFETY: The buffer is valid for read because `f.bytes_written()` is bounded by `size`
855         // (which the minimum buffer size) and is non-zero (we wrote at least the `NUL` terminator)
856         // so `f.bytes_written() - 1` doesn't underflow.
857         let ptr = unsafe { bindings::memchr(buf.as_ptr().cast(), 0, f.bytes_written() - 1) };
858         if !ptr.is_null() {
859             return Err(EINVAL);
860         }
861 
862         // INVARIANT: We wrote the `NUL` terminator and checked above that no other `NUL` bytes
863         // exist in the buffer.
864         Ok(Self { buf })
865     }
866 }
867 
868 impl Deref for CString {
869     type Target = CStr;
870 
871     fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
872         // SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that the string is `NUL`-terminated and that no
873         // other `NUL` bytes exist.
874         unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(self.buf.as_slice()) }
875     }
876 }
877 
878 impl DerefMut for CString {
879     fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
880         // SAFETY: A `CString` is always NUL-terminated and contains no other
881         // NUL bytes.
882         unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked_mut(self.buf.as_mut_slice()) }
883     }
884 }
885 
886 impl<'a> TryFrom<&'a CStr> for CString {
887     type Error = AllocError;
888 
889     fn try_from(cstr: &'a CStr) -> Result<CString, AllocError> {
890         let mut buf = KVec::new();
891 
892         buf.extend_from_slice(cstr.to_bytes_with_nul(), GFP_KERNEL)?;
893 
894         // INVARIANT: The `CStr` and `CString` types have the same invariants for
895         // the string data, and we copied it over without changes.
896         Ok(CString { buf })
897     }
898 }
899 
900 impl fmt::Debug for CString {
901     fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
902         fmt::Debug::fmt(&**self, f)
903     }
904 }
905