On Sat Apr 26, 2025 at 11:18 PM CEST, Danilo Krummrich wrote: > On Sat, Apr 26, 2025 at 08:24:14PM +0000, Benno Lossin wrote: >> On Sat Apr 26, 2025 at 3:30 PM CEST, 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 + /// The caller must ensure this [`Revocable`] instance hasn't been revoked and won't be revoked 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`. >> >> Ah I missed this in my other email, in case you want to directly refer >> to the lifetime, you should keep it defined. I would still remove the >> `'s` lifetime though. >> > + pub unsafe fn access<'a, 's: 'a>(&'s self) -> &'a T { >> > + // SAFETY: By the safety requirement of this function it is guaranteed that >> > + // `self.data.get()` is a valid pointer to an instance of `T`. >> >> I don't see how the "not-being revoked" state makes the `data` ptr be >> valid. Is that an invariant of `Revocable`? (it's not documented to have >> any invariants) > > What else makes it valid? IMO an `# Invariants` section with the corresponding invariant that `data` is valid when `is_available` is true. > AFAICS, try_access() and try_access_with_guard() argue the exact same way, > except that the reason for not being revoked is the atomic check and the RCU > read lock. Just because other code is doing the same mistake doesn't make it correct. If I had reviewed the patch at that time I'm sure I would have pointed this out. I opened an issue about this: https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/1160 Feel free to comment any additional information. --- Cheers, Benno