On Thu, Dec 5, 2024 at 3:16 PM Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > From: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxx> > > Revocable allows access to objects to be safely revoked at run time. > > This is useful, for example, for resources allocated during device probe; > when the device is removed, the driver should stop accessing the device > resources even if another state is kept in memory due to existing > references (i.e., device context data is ref-counted and has a non-zero > refcount after removal of the device). > > Signed-off-by: Wedson Almeida Filho <wedsonaf@xxxxxxxxx> > Co-developed-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@xxxxxxxxxx> Overall looks reasonable, but some comments below. > +impl<T> Revocable<T> { > + /// Creates a new revocable instance of the given data. > + pub fn new(data: impl PinInit<T>) -> impl PinInit<Self> { > + pin_init!(Self { > + is_available: AtomicBool::new(true), > + // SAFETY: The closure only returns `Ok(())` if `ptr` is fully initialized; on error > + // `ptr` is not partially initialized and does not need to be dropped. > + data <- unsafe { > + Opaque::try_ffi_init(|ptr: *mut T| { > + init::PinInit::<T, core::convert::Infallible>::__pinned_init(data, ptr) > + }) This is pretty awkward ... could we have an Opaque::pin_init that takes an `impl PinInit instead of using fii_init? > + }, > + }) > + } > + > + /// Tries to access the revocable wrapped object. > + /// > + /// Returns `None` if the object has been revoked and is therefore no longer accessible. > + /// > + /// Returns a guard that gives access to the object otherwise; the object is guaranteed to > + /// remain accessible while the guard is alive. In such cases, callers are not allowed to sleep > + /// because another CPU may be waiting to complete the revocation of this object. > + pub fn try_access(&self) -> Option<RevocableGuard<'_, T>> { > + let guard = rcu::read_lock(); > + if self.is_available.load(Ordering::Relaxed) { > + // Since `self.is_available` is true, data is initialised and has to remain valid > + // because the RCU read side lock prevents it from being dropped. > + Some(RevocableGuard::new(self.data.get(), guard)) > + } else { > + None > + } > + } > + > + /// Tries to access the revocable wrapped object. > + /// > + /// Returns `None` if the object has been revoked and is therefore no longer accessible. > + /// > + /// Returns a shared reference to the object otherwise; the object is guaranteed to > + /// remain accessible while the rcu read side guard is alive. In such cases, callers are not > + /// allowed to sleep because another CPU may be waiting to complete the revocation of this > + /// object. > + pub fn try_access_with_guard<'a>(&'a self, _guard: &'a rcu::Guard) -> Option<&'a T> { > + if self.is_available.load(Ordering::Relaxed) { > + // SAFETY: Since `self.is_available` is true, data is initialised and has to remain > + // valid because the RCU read side lock prevents it from being dropped. > + Some(unsafe { &*self.data.get() }) > + } else { > + None > + } > + } > + > + /// # Safety > + /// > + /// Callers must ensure that there are no more concurrent users of the revocable object. > + unsafe fn revoke_internal(&self, sync: bool) { This boolean could be a const generic to enforce that it must be a compile-time value. Alice