On Sat, Apr 26, 2025 at 06:44:03PM +0200, Christian Schrefl wrote: > On 26.04.25 3:30 PM, Danilo Krummrich wrote: > > Implement an unsafe direct accessor for the data stored within the > > Revocable. > > > > This is useful for cases where we can proof that the data stored within > > the Revocable is not and cannot be revoked for the duration of the > > lifetime of the returned reference. > > > > Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > The explicit lifetimes in access() probably don't serve a practical > > purpose, but I found them to be useful for documentation purposes. > > ---> rust/kernel/revocable.rs | 12 ++++++++++++ > > 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+) > > > > diff --git a/rust/kernel/revocable.rs b/rust/kernel/revocable.rs > > index 971d0dc38d83..33535de141ce 100644 > > --- a/rust/kernel/revocable.rs > > +++ b/rust/kernel/revocable.rs > > @@ -139,6 +139,18 @@ pub fn try_access_with<R, F: FnOnce(&T) -> R>(&self, f: F) -> Option<R> { > > self.try_access().map(|t| f(&*t)) > > } > > > > + /// Directly access the revocable wrapped object. > > + /// > > + /// # Safety > > + /// > > + /// The caller must ensure this [`Revocable`] instance hasn't been revoked and won't be revoked > > + /// for the duration of `'a`. > > + pub unsafe fn access<'a, 's: 'a>(&'s self) -> &'a T { > I'm not sure if the `'s` lifetime really carries much meaning here. > I find just (explicit) `'a` on both parameter and return value is clearer to me, > but I'm not sure what others (particularly those not very familiar with rust) > think of this. Yeah, I don't think we need two lifetimes here, the following version should be fine (with implicit lifetime): pub unsafe fn access(&self) -> &T { ... } , because if you do: let revocable: &'1 Revocable = ...; ... let t: &'2 T = unsafe { revocable.access() }; '1 should already outlive '2 (i.e. '1: '2). Regards, Boqun > > Either way: > > Reviewed-by: Christian Schrefl <chrisi.schrefl@xxxxxxxxx> > > > + // SAFETY: By the safety requirement of this function it is guaranteed that > > + // `self.data.get()` is a valid pointer to an instance of `T`. > > + unsafe { &*self.data.get() } > > + } > > + > > /// # Safety > > /// > > /// Callers must ensure that there are no more concurrent users of the revocable object. >