1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3 // Copyright (C) 2024 Google LLC. 4 5 //! Files and file descriptors. 6 //! 7 //! C headers: [`include/linux/fs.h`](srctree/include/linux/fs.h) and 8 //! [`include/linux/file.h`](srctree/include/linux/file.h) 9 10 use crate::{ 11 bindings, 12 cred::Credential, 13 error::{code::*, Error, Result}, 14 types::{ARef, AlwaysRefCounted, NotThreadSafe, Opaque}, 15 }; 16 use core::ptr; 17 18 /// Flags associated with a [`File`]. 19 pub mod flags { 20 /// File is opened in append mode. 21 pub const O_APPEND: u32 = bindings::O_APPEND; 22 23 /// Signal-driven I/O is enabled. 24 pub const O_ASYNC: u32 = bindings::FASYNC; 25 26 /// Close-on-exec flag is set. 27 pub const O_CLOEXEC: u32 = bindings::O_CLOEXEC; 28 29 /// File was created if it didn't already exist. 30 pub const O_CREAT: u32 = bindings::O_CREAT; 31 32 /// Direct I/O is enabled for this file. 33 pub const O_DIRECT: u32 = bindings::O_DIRECT; 34 35 /// File must be a directory. 36 pub const O_DIRECTORY: u32 = bindings::O_DIRECTORY; 37 38 /// Like [`O_SYNC`] except metadata is not synced. 39 pub const O_DSYNC: u32 = bindings::O_DSYNC; 40 41 /// Ensure that this file is created with the `open(2)` call. 42 pub const O_EXCL: u32 = bindings::O_EXCL; 43 44 /// Large file size enabled (`off64_t` over `off_t`). 45 pub const O_LARGEFILE: u32 = bindings::O_LARGEFILE; 46 47 /// Do not update the file last access time. 48 pub const O_NOATIME: u32 = bindings::O_NOATIME; 49 50 /// File should not be used as process's controlling terminal. 51 pub const O_NOCTTY: u32 = bindings::O_NOCTTY; 52 53 /// If basename of path is a symbolic link, fail open. 54 pub const O_NOFOLLOW: u32 = bindings::O_NOFOLLOW; 55 56 /// File is using nonblocking I/O. 57 pub const O_NONBLOCK: u32 = bindings::O_NONBLOCK; 58 59 /// File is using nonblocking I/O. 60 /// 61 /// This is effectively the same flag as [`O_NONBLOCK`] on all architectures 62 /// except SPARC64. 63 pub const O_NDELAY: u32 = bindings::O_NDELAY; 64 65 /// Used to obtain a path file descriptor. 66 pub const O_PATH: u32 = bindings::O_PATH; 67 68 /// Write operations on this file will flush data and metadata. 69 pub const O_SYNC: u32 = bindings::O_SYNC; 70 71 /// This file is an unnamed temporary regular file. 72 pub const O_TMPFILE: u32 = bindings::O_TMPFILE; 73 74 /// File should be truncated to length 0. 75 pub const O_TRUNC: u32 = bindings::O_TRUNC; 76 77 /// Bitmask for access mode flags. 78 /// 79 /// # Examples 80 /// 81 /// ``` 82 /// use kernel::fs::file; 83 /// # fn do_something() {} 84 /// # let flags = 0; 85 /// if (flags & file::flags::O_ACCMODE) == file::flags::O_RDONLY { 86 /// do_something(); 87 /// } 88 /// ``` 89 pub const O_ACCMODE: u32 = bindings::O_ACCMODE; 90 91 /// File is read only. 92 pub const O_RDONLY: u32 = bindings::O_RDONLY; 93 94 /// File is write only. 95 pub const O_WRONLY: u32 = bindings::O_WRONLY; 96 97 /// File can be both read and written. 98 pub const O_RDWR: u32 = bindings::O_RDWR; 99 } 100 101 /// Wraps the kernel's `struct file`. Thread safe. 102 /// 103 /// This represents an open file rather than a file on a filesystem. Processes generally reference 104 /// open files using file descriptors. However, file descriptors are not the same as files. A file 105 /// descriptor is just an integer that corresponds to a file, and a single file may be referenced 106 /// by multiple file descriptors. 107 /// 108 /// # Refcounting 109 /// 110 /// Instances of this type are reference-counted. The reference count is incremented by the 111 /// `fget`/`get_file` functions and decremented by `fput`. The Rust type `ARef<File>` represents a 112 /// pointer that owns a reference count on the file. 113 /// 114 /// Whenever a process opens a file descriptor (fd), it stores a pointer to the file in its fd 115 /// table (`struct files_struct`). This pointer owns a reference count to the file, ensuring the 116 /// file isn't prematurely deleted while the file descriptor is open. In Rust terminology, the 117 /// pointers in `struct files_struct` are `ARef<File>` pointers. 118 /// 119 /// ## Light refcounts 120 /// 121 /// Whenever a process has an fd to a file, it may use something called a "light refcount" as a 122 /// performance optimization. Light refcounts are acquired by calling `fdget` and released with 123 /// `fdput`. The idea behind light refcounts is that if the fd is not closed between the calls to 124 /// `fdget` and `fdput`, then the refcount cannot hit zero during that time, as the `struct 125 /// files_struct` holds a reference until the fd is closed. This means that it's safe to access the 126 /// file even if `fdget` does not increment the refcount. 127 /// 128 /// The requirement that the fd is not closed during a light refcount applies globally across all 129 /// threads - not just on the thread using the light refcount. For this reason, light refcounts are 130 /// only used when the `struct files_struct` is not shared with other threads, since this ensures 131 /// that other unrelated threads cannot suddenly start using the fd and close it. Therefore, 132 /// calling `fdget` on a shared `struct files_struct` creates a normal refcount instead of a light 133 /// refcount. 134 /// 135 /// Light reference counts must be released with `fdput` before the system call returns to 136 /// userspace. This means that if you wait until the current system call returns to userspace, then 137 /// all light refcounts that existed at the time have gone away. 138 /// 139 /// ### The file position 140 /// 141 /// Each `struct file` has a position integer, which is protected by the `f_pos_lock` mutex. 142 /// However, if the `struct file` is not shared, then the kernel may avoid taking the lock as a 143 /// performance optimization. 144 /// 145 /// The condition for avoiding the `f_pos_lock` mutex is different from the condition for using 146 /// `fdget`. With `fdget`, you may avoid incrementing the refcount as long as the current fd table 147 /// is not shared; it is okay if there are other fd tables that also reference the same `struct 148 /// file`. However, `fdget_pos` can only avoid taking the `f_pos_lock` if the entire `struct file` 149 /// is not shared, as different processes with an fd to the same `struct file` share the same 150 /// position. 151 /// 152 /// To represent files that are not thread safe due to this optimization, the [`LocalFile`] type is 153 /// used. 154 /// 155 /// ## Rust references 156 /// 157 /// The reference type `&File` is similar to light refcounts: 158 /// 159 /// * `&File` references don't own a reference count. They can only exist as long as the reference 160 /// count stays positive, and can only be created when there is some mechanism in place to ensure 161 /// this. 162 /// 163 /// * The Rust borrow-checker normally ensures this by enforcing that the `ARef<File>` from which 164 /// a `&File` is created outlives the `&File`. 165 /// 166 /// * Using the unsafe [`File::from_raw_file`] means that it is up to the caller to ensure that the 167 /// `&File` only exists while the reference count is positive. 168 /// 169 /// * You can think of `fdget` as using an fd to look up an `ARef<File>` in the `struct 170 /// files_struct` and create an `&File` from it. The "fd cannot be closed" rule is like the Rust 171 /// rule "the `ARef<File>` must outlive the `&File`". 172 /// 173 /// # Invariants 174 /// 175 /// * All instances of this type are refcounted using the `f_count` field. 176 /// * There must not be any active calls to `fdget_pos` on this file that did not take the 177 /// `f_pos_lock` mutex. 178 #[repr(transparent)] 179 pub struct File { 180 inner: Opaque<bindings::file>, 181 } 182 183 // SAFETY: This file is known to not have any active `fdget_pos` calls that did not take the 184 // `f_pos_lock` mutex, so it is safe to transfer it between threads. 185 unsafe impl Send for File {} 186 187 // SAFETY: This file is known to not have any active `fdget_pos` calls that did not take the 188 // `f_pos_lock` mutex, so it is safe to access its methods from several threads in parallel. 189 unsafe impl Sync for File {} 190 191 // SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that `File` is always ref-counted. This implementation 192 // makes `ARef<File>` own a normal refcount. 193 unsafe impl AlwaysRefCounted for File { 194 #[inline] 195 fn inc_ref(&self) { 196 // SAFETY: The existence of a shared reference means that the refcount is nonzero. 197 unsafe { bindings::get_file(self.as_ptr()) }; 198 } 199 200 #[inline] 201 unsafe fn dec_ref(obj: ptr::NonNull<File>) { 202 // SAFETY: To call this method, the caller passes us ownership of a normal refcount, so we 203 // may drop it. The cast is okay since `File` has the same representation as `struct file`. 204 unsafe { bindings::fput(obj.cast().as_ptr()) } 205 } 206 } 207 208 /// Wraps the kernel's `struct file`. Not thread safe. 209 /// 210 /// This type represents a file that is not known to be safe to transfer across thread boundaries. 211 /// To obtain a thread-safe [`File`], use the [`assume_no_fdget_pos`] conversion. 212 /// 213 /// See the documentation for [`File`] for more information. 214 /// 215 /// # Invariants 216 /// 217 /// * All instances of this type are refcounted using the `f_count` field. 218 /// * If there is an active call to `fdget_pos` that did not take the `f_pos_lock` mutex, then it 219 /// must be on the same thread as this file. 220 /// 221 /// [`assume_no_fdget_pos`]: LocalFile::assume_no_fdget_pos 222 pub struct LocalFile { 223 inner: Opaque<bindings::file>, 224 } 225 226 // SAFETY: The type invariants guarantee that `LocalFile` is always ref-counted. This implementation 227 // makes `ARef<File>` own a normal refcount. 228 unsafe impl AlwaysRefCounted for LocalFile { 229 #[inline] 230 fn inc_ref(&self) { 231 // SAFETY: The existence of a shared reference means that the refcount is nonzero. 232 unsafe { bindings::get_file(self.as_ptr()) }; 233 } 234 235 #[inline] 236 unsafe fn dec_ref(obj: ptr::NonNull<LocalFile>) { 237 // SAFETY: To call this method, the caller passes us ownership of a normal refcount, so we 238 // may drop it. The cast is okay since `File` has the same representation as `struct file`. 239 unsafe { bindings::fput(obj.cast().as_ptr()) } 240 } 241 } 242 243 impl LocalFile { 244 /// Constructs a new `struct file` wrapper from a file descriptor. 245 /// 246 /// The file descriptor belongs to the current process, and there might be active local calls 247 /// to `fdget_pos` on the same file. 248 /// 249 /// To obtain an `ARef<File>`, use the [`assume_no_fdget_pos`] function to convert. 250 /// 251 /// [`assume_no_fdget_pos`]: LocalFile::assume_no_fdget_pos 252 #[inline] 253 pub fn fget(fd: u32) -> Result<ARef<LocalFile>, BadFdError> { 254 // SAFETY: FFI call, there are no requirements on `fd`. 255 let ptr = ptr::NonNull::new(unsafe { bindings::fget(fd) }).ok_or(BadFdError)?; 256 257 // SAFETY: `bindings::fget` created a refcount, and we pass ownership of it to the `ARef`. 258 // 259 // INVARIANT: This file is in the fd table on this thread, so either all `fdget_pos` calls 260 // are on this thread, or the file is shared, in which case `fdget_pos` calls took the 261 // `f_pos_lock` mutex. 262 Ok(unsafe { ARef::from_raw(ptr.cast()) }) 263 } 264 265 /// Creates a reference to a [`LocalFile`] from a valid pointer. 266 /// 267 /// # Safety 268 /// 269 /// * The caller must ensure that `ptr` points at a valid file and that the file's refcount is 270 /// positive for the duration of 'a. 271 /// * The caller must ensure that if there is an active call to `fdget_pos` that did not take 272 /// the `f_pos_lock` mutex, then that call is on the current thread. 273 #[inline] 274 pub unsafe fn from_raw_file<'a>(ptr: *const bindings::file) -> &'a LocalFile { 275 // SAFETY: The caller guarantees that the pointer is not dangling and stays valid for the 276 // duration of 'a. The cast is okay because `File` is `repr(transparent)`. 277 // 278 // INVARIANT: The caller guarantees that there are no problematic `fdget_pos` calls. 279 unsafe { &*ptr.cast() } 280 } 281 282 /// Assume that there are no active `fdget_pos` calls that prevent us from sharing this file. 283 /// 284 /// This makes it safe to transfer this file to other threads. No checks are performed, and 285 /// using it incorrectly may lead to a data race on the file position if the file is shared 286 /// with another thread. 287 /// 288 /// This method is intended to be used together with [`LocalFile::fget`] when the caller knows 289 /// statically that there are no `fdget_pos` calls on the current thread. For example, you 290 /// might use it when calling `fget` from an ioctl, since ioctls usually do not touch the file 291 /// position. 292 /// 293 /// # Safety 294 /// 295 /// There must not be any active `fdget_pos` calls on the current thread. 296 #[inline] 297 pub unsafe fn assume_no_fdget_pos(me: ARef<LocalFile>) -> ARef<File> { 298 // INVARIANT: There are no `fdget_pos` calls on the current thread, and by the type 299 // invariants, if there is a `fdget_pos` call on another thread, then it took the 300 // `f_pos_lock` mutex. 301 // 302 // SAFETY: `LocalFile` and `File` have the same layout. 303 unsafe { ARef::from_raw(ARef::into_raw(me).cast()) } 304 } 305 306 /// Returns a raw pointer to the inner C struct. 307 #[inline] 308 pub fn as_ptr(&self) -> *mut bindings::file { 309 self.inner.get() 310 } 311 312 /// Returns the credentials of the task that originally opened the file. 313 pub fn cred(&self) -> &Credential { 314 // SAFETY: It's okay to read the `f_cred` field without synchronization because `f_cred` is 315 // never changed after initialization of the file. 316 let ptr = unsafe { (*self.as_ptr()).f_cred }; 317 318 // SAFETY: The signature of this function ensures that the caller will only access the 319 // returned credential while the file is still valid, and the C side ensures that the 320 // credential stays valid at least as long as the file. 321 unsafe { Credential::from_ptr(ptr) } 322 } 323 324 /// Returns the flags associated with the file. 325 /// 326 /// The flags are a combination of the constants in [`flags`]. 327 #[inline] 328 pub fn flags(&self) -> u32 { 329 // This `read_volatile` is intended to correspond to a READ_ONCE call. 330 // 331 // SAFETY: The file is valid because the shared reference guarantees a nonzero refcount. 332 // 333 // FIXME(read_once): Replace with `read_once` when available on the Rust side. 334 unsafe { core::ptr::addr_of!((*self.as_ptr()).f_flags).read_volatile() } 335 } 336 } 337 338 impl File { 339 /// Creates a reference to a [`File`] from a valid pointer. 340 /// 341 /// # Safety 342 /// 343 /// * The caller must ensure that `ptr` points at a valid file and that the file's refcount is 344 /// positive for the duration of 'a. 345 /// * The caller must ensure that if there are active `fdget_pos` calls on this file, then they 346 /// took the `f_pos_lock` mutex. 347 #[inline] 348 pub unsafe fn from_raw_file<'a>(ptr: *const bindings::file) -> &'a File { 349 // SAFETY: The caller guarantees that the pointer is not dangling and stays valid for the 350 // duration of 'a. The cast is okay because `File` is `repr(transparent)`. 351 // 352 // INVARIANT: The caller guarantees that there are no problematic `fdget_pos` calls. 353 unsafe { &*ptr.cast() } 354 } 355 } 356 357 // Make LocalFile methods available on File. 358 impl core::ops::Deref for File { 359 type Target = LocalFile; 360 #[inline] 361 fn deref(&self) -> &LocalFile { 362 // SAFETY: The caller provides a `&File`, and since it is a reference, it must point at a 363 // valid file for the desired duration. 364 // 365 // By the type invariants, there are no `fdget_pos` calls that did not take the 366 // `f_pos_lock` mutex. 367 unsafe { LocalFile::from_raw_file(self as *const File as *const bindings::file) } 368 } 369 } 370 371 /// A file descriptor reservation. 372 /// 373 /// This allows the creation of a file descriptor in two steps: first, we reserve a slot for it, 374 /// then we commit or drop the reservation. The first step may fail (e.g., the current process ran 375 /// out of available slots), but commit and drop never fail (and are mutually exclusive). 376 /// 377 /// Dropping the reservation happens in the destructor of this type. 378 /// 379 /// # Invariants 380 /// 381 /// The fd stored in this struct must correspond to a reserved file descriptor of the current task. 382 pub struct FileDescriptorReservation { 383 fd: u32, 384 /// Prevent values of this type from being moved to a different task. 385 /// 386 /// The `fd_install` and `put_unused_fd` functions assume that the value of `current` is 387 /// unchanged since the call to `get_unused_fd_flags`. By adding this marker to this type, we 388 /// prevent it from being moved across task boundaries, which ensures that `current` does not 389 /// change while this value exists. 390 _not_send: NotThreadSafe, 391 } 392 393 impl FileDescriptorReservation { 394 /// Creates a new file descriptor reservation. 395 pub fn get_unused_fd_flags(flags: u32) -> Result<Self> { 396 // SAFETY: FFI call, there are no safety requirements on `flags`. 397 let fd: i32 = unsafe { bindings::get_unused_fd_flags(flags) }; 398 if fd < 0 { 399 return Err(Error::from_errno(fd)); 400 } 401 Ok(Self { 402 fd: fd as u32, 403 _not_send: NotThreadSafe, 404 }) 405 } 406 407 /// Returns the file descriptor number that was reserved. 408 pub fn reserved_fd(&self) -> u32 { 409 self.fd 410 } 411 412 /// Commits the reservation. 413 /// 414 /// The previously reserved file descriptor is bound to `file`. This method consumes the 415 /// [`FileDescriptorReservation`], so it will not be usable after this call. 416 pub fn fd_install(self, file: ARef<File>) { 417 // SAFETY: `self.fd` was previously returned by `get_unused_fd_flags`. We have not yet used 418 // the fd, so it is still valid, and `current` still refers to the same task, as this type 419 // cannot be moved across task boundaries. 420 // 421 // Furthermore, the file pointer is guaranteed to own a refcount by its type invariants, 422 // and we take ownership of that refcount by not running the destructor below. 423 // Additionally, the file is known to not have any non-shared `fdget_pos` calls, so even if 424 // this process starts using the file position, this will not result in a data race on the 425 // file position. 426 unsafe { bindings::fd_install(self.fd, file.as_ptr()) }; 427 428 // `fd_install` consumes both the file descriptor and the file reference, so we cannot run 429 // the destructors. 430 core::mem::forget(self); 431 core::mem::forget(file); 432 } 433 } 434 435 impl Drop for FileDescriptorReservation { 436 fn drop(&mut self) { 437 // SAFETY: By the type invariants of this type, `self.fd` was previously returned by 438 // `get_unused_fd_flags`. We have not yet used the fd, so it is still valid, and `current` 439 // still refers to the same task, as this type cannot be moved across task boundaries. 440 unsafe { bindings::put_unused_fd(self.fd) }; 441 } 442 } 443 444 /// Represents the `EBADF` error code. 445 /// 446 /// Used for methods that can only fail with `EBADF`. 447 #[derive(Copy, Clone, Eq, PartialEq)] 448 pub struct BadFdError; 449 450 impl From<BadFdError> for Error { 451 #[inline] 452 fn from(_: BadFdError) -> Error { 453 EBADF 454 } 455 } 456 457 impl core::fmt::Debug for BadFdError { 458 fn fmt(&self, f: &mut core::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> core::fmt::Result { 459 f.pad("EBADF") 460 } 461 } 462