1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 //! Kernel errors. 4 //! 5 //! C header: [`include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h`](srctree/include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h) 6 7 use crate::{alloc::AllocError, str::CStr}; 8 9 use alloc::alloc::LayoutError; 10 11 use core::fmt; 12 use core::num::TryFromIntError; 13 use core::str::Utf8Error; 14 15 /// Contains the C-compatible error codes. 16 #[rustfmt::skip] 17 pub mod code { 18 macro_rules! declare_err { 19 ($err:tt $(,)? $($doc:expr),+) => { 20 $( 21 #[doc = $doc] 22 )* 23 pub const $err: super::Error = super::Error(-(crate::bindings::$err as i32)); 24 }; 25 } 26 27 declare_err!(EPERM, "Operation not permitted."); 28 declare_err!(ENOENT, "No such file or directory."); 29 declare_err!(ESRCH, "No such process."); 30 declare_err!(EINTR, "Interrupted system call."); 31 declare_err!(EIO, "I/O error."); 32 declare_err!(ENXIO, "No such device or address."); 33 declare_err!(E2BIG, "Argument list too long."); 34 declare_err!(ENOEXEC, "Exec format error."); 35 declare_err!(EBADF, "Bad file number."); 36 declare_err!(ECHILD, "No child processes."); 37 declare_err!(EAGAIN, "Try again."); 38 declare_err!(ENOMEM, "Out of memory."); 39 declare_err!(EACCES, "Permission denied."); 40 declare_err!(EFAULT, "Bad address."); 41 declare_err!(ENOTBLK, "Block device required."); 42 declare_err!(EBUSY, "Device or resource busy."); 43 declare_err!(EEXIST, "File exists."); 44 declare_err!(EXDEV, "Cross-device link."); 45 declare_err!(ENODEV, "No such device."); 46 declare_err!(ENOTDIR, "Not a directory."); 47 declare_err!(EISDIR, "Is a directory."); 48 declare_err!(EINVAL, "Invalid argument."); 49 declare_err!(ENFILE, "File table overflow."); 50 declare_err!(EMFILE, "Too many open files."); 51 declare_err!(ENOTTY, "Not a typewriter."); 52 declare_err!(ETXTBSY, "Text file busy."); 53 declare_err!(EFBIG, "File too large."); 54 declare_err!(ENOSPC, "No space left on device."); 55 declare_err!(ESPIPE, "Illegal seek."); 56 declare_err!(EROFS, "Read-only file system."); 57 declare_err!(EMLINK, "Too many links."); 58 declare_err!(EPIPE, "Broken pipe."); 59 declare_err!(EDOM, "Math argument out of domain of func."); 60 declare_err!(ERANGE, "Math result not representable."); 61 declare_err!(ERESTARTSYS, "Restart the system call."); 62 declare_err!(ERESTARTNOINTR, "System call was interrupted by a signal and will be restarted."); 63 declare_err!(ERESTARTNOHAND, "Restart if no handler."); 64 declare_err!(ENOIOCTLCMD, "No ioctl command."); 65 declare_err!(ERESTART_RESTARTBLOCK, "Restart by calling sys_restart_syscall."); 66 declare_err!(EPROBE_DEFER, "Driver requests probe retry."); 67 declare_err!(EOPENSTALE, "Open found a stale dentry."); 68 declare_err!(ENOPARAM, "Parameter not supported."); 69 declare_err!(EBADHANDLE, "Illegal NFS file handle."); 70 declare_err!(ENOTSYNC, "Update synchronization mismatch."); 71 declare_err!(EBADCOOKIE, "Cookie is stale."); 72 declare_err!(ENOTSUPP, "Operation is not supported."); 73 declare_err!(ETOOSMALL, "Buffer or request is too small."); 74 declare_err!(ESERVERFAULT, "An untranslatable error occurred."); 75 declare_err!(EBADTYPE, "Type not supported by server."); 76 declare_err!(EJUKEBOX, "Request initiated, but will not complete before timeout."); 77 declare_err!(EIOCBQUEUED, "iocb queued, will get completion event."); 78 declare_err!(ERECALLCONFLICT, "Conflict with recalled state."); 79 declare_err!(ENOGRACE, "NFS file lock reclaim refused."); 80 } 81 82 /// Generic integer kernel error. 83 /// 84 /// The kernel defines a set of integer generic error codes based on C and 85 /// POSIX ones. These codes may have a more specific meaning in some contexts. 86 /// 87 /// # Invariants 88 /// 89 /// The value is a valid `errno` (i.e. `>= -MAX_ERRNO && < 0`). 90 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] 91 pub struct Error(core::ffi::c_int); 92 93 impl Error { 94 /// Creates an [`Error`] from a kernel error code. 95 /// 96 /// It is a bug to pass an out-of-range `errno`. `EINVAL` would 97 /// be returned in such a case. 98 pub(crate) fn from_errno(errno: core::ffi::c_int) -> Error { 99 if errno < -(bindings::MAX_ERRNO as i32) || errno >= 0 { 100 // TODO: Make it a `WARN_ONCE` once available. 101 crate::pr_warn!( 102 "attempted to create `Error` with out of range `errno`: {}", 103 errno 104 ); 105 return code::EINVAL; 106 } 107 108 // INVARIANT: The check above ensures the type invariant 109 // will hold. 110 Error(errno) 111 } 112 113 /// Creates an [`Error`] from a kernel error code. 114 /// 115 /// # Safety 116 /// 117 /// `errno` must be within error code range (i.e. `>= -MAX_ERRNO && < 0`). 118 unsafe fn from_errno_unchecked(errno: core::ffi::c_int) -> Error { 119 // INVARIANT: The contract ensures the type invariant 120 // will hold. 121 Error(errno) 122 } 123 124 /// Returns the kernel error code. 125 pub fn to_errno(self) -> core::ffi::c_int { 126 self.0 127 } 128 129 /// Returns the error encoded as a pointer. 130 #[allow(dead_code)] 131 pub(crate) fn to_ptr<T>(self) -> *mut T { 132 // SAFETY: `self.0` is a valid error due to its invariant. 133 unsafe { bindings::ERR_PTR(self.0.into()) as *mut _ } 134 } 135 136 /// Returns a string representing the error, if one exists. 137 #[cfg(not(testlib))] 138 pub fn name(&self) -> Option<&'static CStr> { 139 // SAFETY: Just an FFI call, there are no extra safety requirements. 140 let ptr = unsafe { bindings::errname(-self.0) }; 141 if ptr.is_null() { 142 None 143 } else { 144 // SAFETY: The string returned by `errname` is static and `NUL`-terminated. 145 Some(unsafe { CStr::from_char_ptr(ptr) }) 146 } 147 } 148 149 /// Returns a string representing the error, if one exists. 150 /// 151 /// When `testlib` is configured, this always returns `None` to avoid the dependency on a 152 /// kernel function so that tests that use this (e.g., by calling [`Result::unwrap`]) can still 153 /// run in userspace. 154 #[cfg(testlib)] 155 pub fn name(&self) -> Option<&'static CStr> { 156 None 157 } 158 } 159 160 impl fmt::Debug for Error { 161 fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { 162 match self.name() { 163 // Print out number if no name can be found. 164 None => f.debug_tuple("Error").field(&-self.0).finish(), 165 // SAFETY: These strings are ASCII-only. 166 Some(name) => f 167 .debug_tuple(unsafe { core::str::from_utf8_unchecked(name) }) 168 .finish(), 169 } 170 } 171 } 172 173 impl From<AllocError> for Error { 174 fn from(_: AllocError) -> Error { 175 code::ENOMEM 176 } 177 } 178 179 impl From<TryFromIntError> for Error { 180 fn from(_: TryFromIntError) -> Error { 181 code::EINVAL 182 } 183 } 184 185 impl From<Utf8Error> for Error { 186 fn from(_: Utf8Error) -> Error { 187 code::EINVAL 188 } 189 } 190 191 impl From<LayoutError> for Error { 192 fn from(_: LayoutError) -> Error { 193 code::ENOMEM 194 } 195 } 196 197 impl From<core::fmt::Error> for Error { 198 fn from(_: core::fmt::Error) -> Error { 199 code::EINVAL 200 } 201 } 202 203 impl From<core::convert::Infallible> for Error { 204 fn from(e: core::convert::Infallible) -> Error { 205 match e {} 206 } 207 } 208 209 /// A [`Result`] with an [`Error`] error type. 210 /// 211 /// To be used as the return type for functions that may fail. 212 /// 213 /// # Error codes in C and Rust 214 /// 215 /// In C, it is common that functions indicate success or failure through 216 /// their return value; modifying or returning extra data through non-`const` 217 /// pointer parameters. In particular, in the kernel, functions that may fail 218 /// typically return an `int` that represents a generic error code. We model 219 /// those as [`Error`]. 220 /// 221 /// In Rust, it is idiomatic to model functions that may fail as returning 222 /// a [`Result`]. Since in the kernel many functions return an error code, 223 /// [`Result`] is a type alias for a [`core::result::Result`] that uses 224 /// [`Error`] as its error type. 225 /// 226 /// Note that even if a function does not return anything when it succeeds, 227 /// it should still be modeled as returning a `Result` rather than 228 /// just an [`Error`]. 229 pub type Result<T = (), E = Error> = core::result::Result<T, E>; 230 231 /// Converts an integer as returned by a C kernel function to an error if it's negative, and 232 /// `Ok(())` otherwise. 233 pub fn to_result(err: core::ffi::c_int) -> Result { 234 if err < 0 { 235 Err(Error::from_errno(err)) 236 } else { 237 Ok(()) 238 } 239 } 240 241 /// Transform a kernel "error pointer" to a normal pointer. 242 /// 243 /// Some kernel C API functions return an "error pointer" which optionally 244 /// embeds an `errno`. Callers are supposed to check the returned pointer 245 /// for errors. This function performs the check and converts the "error pointer" 246 /// to a normal pointer in an idiomatic fashion. 247 /// 248 /// # Examples 249 /// 250 /// ```ignore 251 /// # use kernel::from_err_ptr; 252 /// # use kernel::bindings; 253 /// fn devm_platform_ioremap_resource( 254 /// pdev: &mut PlatformDevice, 255 /// index: u32, 256 /// ) -> Result<*mut core::ffi::c_void> { 257 /// // SAFETY: `pdev` points to a valid platform device. There are no safety requirements 258 /// // on `index`. 259 /// from_err_ptr(unsafe { bindings::devm_platform_ioremap_resource(pdev.to_ptr(), index) }) 260 /// } 261 /// ``` 262 // TODO: Remove `dead_code` marker once an in-kernel client is available. 263 #[allow(dead_code)] 264 pub(crate) fn from_err_ptr<T>(ptr: *mut T) -> Result<*mut T> { 265 // CAST: Casting a pointer to `*const core::ffi::c_void` is always valid. 266 let const_ptr: *const core::ffi::c_void = ptr.cast(); 267 // SAFETY: The FFI function does not deref the pointer. 268 if unsafe { bindings::IS_ERR(const_ptr) } { 269 // SAFETY: The FFI function does not deref the pointer. 270 let err = unsafe { bindings::PTR_ERR(const_ptr) }; 271 // CAST: If `IS_ERR()` returns `true`, 272 // then `PTR_ERR()` is guaranteed to return a 273 // negative value greater-or-equal to `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`, 274 // which always fits in an `i16`, as per the invariant above. 275 // And an `i16` always fits in an `i32`. So casting `err` to 276 // an `i32` can never overflow, and is always valid. 277 // 278 // SAFETY: `IS_ERR()` ensures `err` is a 279 // negative value greater-or-equal to `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`. 280 #[allow(clippy::unnecessary_cast)] 281 return Err(unsafe { Error::from_errno_unchecked(err as core::ffi::c_int) }); 282 } 283 Ok(ptr) 284 } 285 286 /// Calls a closure returning a [`crate::error::Result<T>`] and converts the result to 287 /// a C integer result. 288 /// 289 /// This is useful when calling Rust functions that return [`crate::error::Result<T>`] 290 /// from inside `extern "C"` functions that need to return an integer error result. 291 /// 292 /// `T` should be convertible from an `i16` via `From<i16>`. 293 /// 294 /// # Examples 295 /// 296 /// ```ignore 297 /// # use kernel::from_result; 298 /// # use kernel::bindings; 299 /// unsafe extern "C" fn probe_callback( 300 /// pdev: *mut bindings::platform_device, 301 /// ) -> core::ffi::c_int { 302 /// from_result(|| { 303 /// let ptr = devm_alloc(pdev)?; 304 /// bindings::platform_set_drvdata(pdev, ptr); 305 /// Ok(0) 306 /// }) 307 /// } 308 /// ``` 309 // TODO: Remove `dead_code` marker once an in-kernel client is available. 310 #[allow(dead_code)] 311 pub(crate) fn from_result<T, F>(f: F) -> T 312 where 313 T: From<i16>, 314 F: FnOnce() -> Result<T>, 315 { 316 match f() { 317 Ok(v) => v, 318 // NO-OVERFLOW: negative `errno`s are no smaller than `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO`, 319 // `-bindings::MAX_ERRNO` fits in an `i16` as per invariant above, 320 // therefore a negative `errno` always fits in an `i16` and will not overflow. 321 Err(e) => T::from(e.to_errno() as i16), 322 } 323 } 324 325 /// Error message for calling a default function of a [`#[vtable]`](macros::vtable) trait. 326 pub const VTABLE_DEFAULT_ERROR: &str = 327 "This function must not be called, see the #[vtable] documentation."; 328