diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'rust/macros/lib.rs')
-rw-r--r-- | rust/macros/lib.rs | 108 |
1 files changed, 102 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/rust/macros/lib.rs b/rust/macros/lib.rs index 91764bfb1f89..c1d385e345b9 100644 --- a/rust/macros/lib.rs +++ b/rust/macros/lib.rs @@ -2,8 +2,10 @@ //! Crate for all kernel procedural macros. +mod concat_idents; mod helpers; mod module; +mod vtable; use proc_macro::TokenStream; @@ -23,20 +25,20 @@ use proc_macro::TokenStream; /// /// module!{ /// type: MyModule, -/// name: b"my_kernel_module", -/// author: b"Rust for Linux Contributors", -/// description: b"My very own kernel module!", -/// license: b"GPL", +/// name: "my_kernel_module", +/// author: "Rust for Linux Contributors", +/// description: "My very own kernel module!", +/// license: "GPL", /// params: { /// my_i32: i32 { /// default: 42, /// permissions: 0o000, -/// description: b"Example of i32", +/// description: "Example of i32", /// }, /// writeable_i32: i32 { /// default: 42, /// permissions: 0o644, -/// description: b"Example of i32", +/// description: "Example of i32", /// }, /// }, /// } @@ -70,3 +72,97 @@ use proc_macro::TokenStream; pub fn module(ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream { module::module(ts) } + +/// Declares or implements a vtable trait. +/// +/// Linux's use of pure vtables is very close to Rust traits, but they differ +/// in how unimplemented functions are represented. In Rust, traits can provide +/// default implementation for all non-required methods (and the default +/// implementation could just return `Error::EINVAL`); Linux typically use C +/// `NULL` pointers to represent these functions. +/// +/// This attribute is intended to close the gap. Traits can be declared and +/// implemented with the `#[vtable]` attribute, and a `HAS_*` associated constant +/// will be generated for each method in the trait, indicating if the implementor +/// has overridden a method. +/// +/// This attribute is not needed if all methods are required. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```ignore +/// use kernel::prelude::*; +/// +/// // Declares a `#[vtable]` trait +/// #[vtable] +/// pub trait Operations: Send + Sync + Sized { +/// fn foo(&self) -> Result<()> { +/// Err(EINVAL) +/// } +/// +/// fn bar(&self) -> Result<()> { +/// Err(EINVAL) +/// } +/// } +/// +/// struct Foo; +/// +/// // Implements the `#[vtable]` trait +/// #[vtable] +/// impl Operations for Foo { +/// fn foo(&self) -> Result<()> { +/// # Err(EINVAL) +/// // ... +/// } +/// } +/// +/// assert_eq!(<Foo as Operations>::HAS_FOO, true); +/// assert_eq!(<Foo as Operations>::HAS_BAR, false); +/// ``` +#[proc_macro_attribute] +pub fn vtable(attr: TokenStream, ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream { + vtable::vtable(attr, ts) +} + +/// Concatenate two identifiers. +/// +/// This is useful in macros that need to declare or reference items with names +/// starting with a fixed prefix and ending in a user specified name. The resulting +/// identifier has the span of the second argument. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```ignore +/// use kernel::macro::concat_idents; +/// +/// macro_rules! pub_no_prefix { +/// ($prefix:ident, $($newname:ident),+) => { +/// $(pub(crate) const $newname: u32 = kernel::macros::concat_idents!($prefix, $newname);)+ +/// }; +/// } +/// +/// pub_no_prefix!( +/// binder_driver_return_protocol_, +/// BR_OK, +/// BR_ERROR, +/// BR_TRANSACTION, +/// BR_REPLY, +/// BR_DEAD_REPLY, +/// BR_TRANSACTION_COMPLETE, +/// BR_INCREFS, +/// BR_ACQUIRE, +/// BR_RELEASE, +/// BR_DECREFS, +/// BR_NOOP, +/// BR_SPAWN_LOOPER, +/// BR_DEAD_BINDER, +/// BR_CLEAR_DEATH_NOTIFICATION_DONE, +/// BR_FAILED_REPLY +/// ); +/// +/// assert_eq!(BR_OK, binder_driver_return_protocol_BR_OK); +/// ``` +#[proc_macro] +pub fn concat_idents(ts: TokenStream) -> TokenStream { + concat_idents::concat_idents(ts) +} |