"Alice Ryhl" <aliceryhl@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Fri, Aug 15, 2025 at 09:30:41AM +0200, Andreas Hindborg wrote: >> Add a convenience function to convert byte slices to boolean values by >> wrapping them in a null-terminated C string and delegating to the >> existing `kstrtobool` function. Only considers the first two bytes of >> the input slice, following the kernel's boolean parsing semantics. >> >> Signed-off-by: Andreas Hindborg <a.hindborg@xxxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> rust/kernel/str.rs | 10 ++++++++++ >> 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+) >> >> diff --git a/rust/kernel/str.rs b/rust/kernel/str.rs >> index 5611f7846dc0..ced1cb639efc 100644 >> --- a/rust/kernel/str.rs >> +++ b/rust/kernel/str.rs >> @@ -978,6 +978,16 @@ pub fn kstrtobool(string: &CStr) -> Result<bool> { >> kernel::error::to_result(ret).map(|()| result) >> } >> >> +/// Convert `&[u8]` to `bool` by deferring to [`kernel::str::kstrtobool`]. >> +/// >> +/// Only considers at most the first two bytes of `bytes`. >> +pub fn bytes_to_bool(bytes: &[u8]) -> Result<bool> { >> + // `ktostrbool` only considers the first two bytes of the input. >> + let nbuffer = [*bytes.first().unwrap_or(&0), *bytes.get(1).unwrap_or(&0), 0]; >> + let c_str = CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(nbuffer.split_inclusive(|c| *c == 0).next().unwrap())?; >> + kstrtobool(c_str) >> +} > > Ouch. That's unpleasant. I would probably suggest this instead to avoid > the length computation: > > /// # Safety > /// `string` is a readable NUL-terminated string > unsafe fn kstrtobool_raw(string: *const c_char) -> Result<bool> { > let mut result: bool = false; > let ret = unsafe { bindings::kstrtobool(string, &raw mut result) }; > kernel::error::to_result(ret).map(|()| result) > } > > pub fn kstrtobool(string: &CStr) -> Result<bool> { > // SAFETY: Caller ensures that `string` is NUL-terminated. > unsafe { kstrtobool_cstr(string.as_char_ptr()) } > } > > pub fn kstrtobool_bytes(string: &[u8]) -> Result<bool> { > let mut stack_string = [0u8; 3]; > > if let Some(first) = string.get(0) { Clippy will complain about `string.get(0)` suggesting `string.first()`. > stack_string[0] = *first; > } > if let Some(second) = string.get(1) { > stack_string[1] = *second; > } I don't really think this procedural assignment is better or worse than assigning at declaration. > > // SAFETY: stack_string[2] is zero, so the string is NUL-terminated. > unsafe { kstrtobool_cstr(stack_string.as_ptr()) } I'll split it up. Best regards, Andreas Hindborg