qemu/rust/qemu-api/src/qom.rs
Paolo Bonzini 5df3fe062f rust: enable clippy::ptr_cast_constness
Reviewed-by: Manos Pitsidianakis <manos.pitsidianakis@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Zhao Liu <zhao1.liu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
2025-05-06 16:02:04 +02:00

772 lines
29 KiB
Rust

// Copyright 2024, Linaro Limited
// Author(s): Manos Pitsidianakis <manos.pitsidianakis@linaro.org>
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
//! Bindings to access QOM functionality from Rust.
//!
//! The QEMU Object Model (QOM) provides inheritance and dynamic typing for QEMU
//! devices. This module makes QOM's features available in Rust through three
//! main mechanisms:
//!
//! * Automatic creation and registration of `TypeInfo` for classes that are
//! written in Rust, as well as mapping between Rust traits and QOM vtables.
//!
//! * Type-safe casting between parent and child classes, through the [`IsA`]
//! trait and methods such as [`upcast`](ObjectCast::upcast) and
//! [`downcast`](ObjectCast::downcast).
//!
//! * Automatic delegation of parent class methods to child classes. When a
//! trait uses [`IsA`] as a bound, its contents become available to all child
//! classes through blanket implementations. This works both for class methods
//! and for instance methods accessed through references or smart pointers.
//!
//! # Structure of a class
//!
//! A leaf class only needs a struct holding instance state. The struct must
//! implement the [`ObjectType`] and [`IsA`] traits, as well as any `*Impl`
//! traits that exist for its superclasses.
//!
//! If a class has subclasses, it will also provide a struct for instance data,
//! with the same characteristics as for concrete classes, but it also needs
//! additional components to support virtual methods:
//!
//! * a struct for class data, for example `DeviceClass`. This corresponds to
//! the C "class struct" and holds the vtable that is used by instances of the
//! class and its subclasses. It must start with its parent's class struct.
//!
//! * a trait for virtual method implementations, for example `DeviceImpl`.
//! Child classes implement this trait to provide their own behavior for
//! virtual methods. The trait's methods take `&self` to access instance data.
//! The traits have the appropriate specialization of `IsA<>` as a supertrait,
//! for example `IsA<DeviceState>` for `DeviceImpl`.
//!
//! * a trait for instance methods, for example `DeviceMethods`. This trait is
//! automatically implemented for any reference or smart pointer to a device
//! instance. It calls into the vtable provides access across all subclasses
//! to methods defined for the class.
//!
//! * optionally, a trait for class methods, for example `DeviceClassMethods`.
//! This provides access to class-wide functionality that doesn't depend on
//! instance data. Like instance methods, these are automatically inherited by
//! child classes.
//!
//! # Class structures
//!
//! Each QOM class that has virtual methods describes them in a
//! _class struct_. Class structs include a parent field corresponding
//! to the vtable of the parent class, all the way up to [`ObjectClass`].
//!
//! As mentioned above, virtual methods are defined via traits such as
//! `DeviceImpl`. Class structs do not define any trait but, conventionally,
//! all of them have a `class_init` method to initialize the virtual methods
//! based on the trait and then call the same method on the superclass.
//!
//! ```ignore
//! impl YourSubclassClass
//! {
//! pub fn class_init<T: YourSubclassImpl>(&mut self) {
//! ...
//! klass.parent_class::class_init<T>();
//! }
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! If a class implements a QOM interface. In that case, the function must
//! contain, for each interface, an extra forwarding call as follows:
//!
//! ```ignore
//! ResettableClass::cast::<Self>(self).class_init::<Self>();
//! ```
//!
//! These `class_init` functions are methods on the class rather than a trait,
//! because the bound on `T` (`DeviceImpl` in this case), will change for every
//! class struct. The functions are pointed to by the
//! [`ObjectImpl::CLASS_INIT`] function pointer. While there is no default
//! implementation, in most cases it will be enough to write it as follows:
//!
//! ```ignore
//! const CLASS_INIT: fn(&mut Self::Class)> = Self::Class::class_init::<Self>;
//! ```
//!
//! This design incurs a small amount of code duplication but, by not using
//! traits, it allows the flexibility of implementing bindings in any crate,
//! without incurring into violations of orphan rules for traits.
use std::{
ffi::{c_void, CStr},
fmt,
mem::ManuallyDrop,
ops::{Deref, DerefMut},
ptr::NonNull,
};
pub use bindings::ObjectClass;
use crate::{
bindings::{
self, object_class_dynamic_cast, object_dynamic_cast, object_get_class,
object_get_typename, object_new, object_ref, object_unref, TypeInfo,
},
cell::{bql_locked, Opaque},
};
/// A safe wrapper around [`bindings::Object`].
#[repr(transparent)]
#[derive(Debug, qemu_api_macros::Wrapper)]
pub struct Object(Opaque<bindings::Object>);
unsafe impl Send for Object {}
unsafe impl Sync for Object {}
/// Marker trait: `Self` can be statically upcasted to `P` (i.e. `P` is a direct
/// or indirect parent of `Self`).
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The struct `Self` must be `#[repr(C)]` and must begin, directly or
/// indirectly, with a field of type `P`. This ensures that invalid casts,
/// which rely on `IsA<>` for static checking, are rejected at compile time.
pub unsafe trait IsA<P: ObjectType>: ObjectType {}
// SAFETY: it is always safe to cast to your own type
unsafe impl<T: ObjectType> IsA<T> for T {}
/// Macro to mark superclasses of QOM classes. This enables type-safe
/// up- and downcasting.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This macro is a thin wrapper around the [`IsA`] trait and performs
/// no checking whatsoever of what is declared. It is the caller's
/// responsibility to have $struct begin, directly or indirectly, with
/// a field of type `$parent`.
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! qom_isa {
($struct:ty : $($parent:ty),* ) => {
$(
// SAFETY: it is the caller responsibility to have $parent as the
// first field
unsafe impl $crate::qom::IsA<$parent> for $struct {}
impl AsRef<$parent> for $struct {
fn as_ref(&self) -> &$parent {
// SAFETY: follows the same rules as for IsA<U>, which is
// declared above.
let ptr: *const Self = self;
unsafe { &*ptr.cast::<$parent>() }
}
}
)*
};
}
/// This is the same as [`ManuallyDrop<T>`](std::mem::ManuallyDrop), though
/// it hides the standard methods of `ManuallyDrop`.
///
/// The first field of an `ObjectType` must be of type `ParentField<T>`.
/// (Technically, this is only necessary if there is at least one Rust
/// superclass in the hierarchy). This is to ensure that the parent field is
/// dropped after the subclass; this drop order is enforced by the C
/// `object_deinit` function.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```ignore
/// #[repr(C)]
/// #[derive(qemu_api_macros::Object)]
/// pub struct MyDevice {
/// parent: ParentField<DeviceState>,
/// ...
/// }
/// ```
#[derive(Debug)]
#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct ParentField<T: ObjectType>(std::mem::ManuallyDrop<T>);
impl<T: ObjectType> Deref for ParentField<T> {
type Target = T;
#[inline(always)]
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
&self.0
}
}
impl<T: ObjectType> DerefMut for ParentField<T> {
#[inline(always)]
fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut Self::Target {
&mut self.0
}
}
impl<T: fmt::Display + ObjectType> fmt::Display for ParentField<T> {
#[inline(always)]
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> {
self.0.fmt(f)
}
}
unsafe extern "C" fn rust_instance_init<T: ObjectImpl>(obj: *mut bindings::Object) {
let mut state = NonNull::new(obj).unwrap().cast::<T>();
// SAFETY: obj is an instance of T, since rust_instance_init<T>
// is called from QOM core as the instance_init function
// for class T
unsafe {
T::INSTANCE_INIT.unwrap()(state.as_mut());
}
}
unsafe extern "C" fn rust_instance_post_init<T: ObjectImpl>(obj: *mut bindings::Object) {
let state = NonNull::new(obj).unwrap().cast::<T>();
// SAFETY: obj is an instance of T, since rust_instance_post_init<T>
// is called from QOM core as the instance_post_init function
// for class T
T::INSTANCE_POST_INIT.unwrap()(unsafe { state.as_ref() });
}
unsafe extern "C" fn rust_class_init<T: ObjectType + ObjectImpl>(
klass: *mut ObjectClass,
_data: *const c_void,
) {
let mut klass = NonNull::new(klass)
.unwrap()
.cast::<<T as ObjectType>::Class>();
// SAFETY: klass is a T::Class, since rust_class_init<T>
// is called from QOM core as the class_init function
// for class T
<T as ObjectImpl>::CLASS_INIT(unsafe { klass.as_mut() })
}
unsafe extern "C" fn drop_object<T: ObjectImpl>(obj: *mut bindings::Object) {
// SAFETY: obj is an instance of T, since drop_object<T> is called
// from the QOM core function object_deinit() as the instance_finalize
// function for class T. Note that while object_deinit() will drop the
// superclass field separately after this function returns, `T` must
// implement the unsafe trait ObjectType; the safety rules for the
// trait mandate that the parent field is manually dropped.
unsafe { std::ptr::drop_in_place(obj.cast::<T>()) }
}
/// Trait exposed by all structs corresponding to QOM objects.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// For classes declared in C:
///
/// - `Class` and `TYPE` must match the data in the `TypeInfo`;
///
/// - the first field of the struct must be of the instance type corresponding
/// to the superclass, as declared in the `TypeInfo`
///
/// - likewise, the first field of the `Class` struct must be of the class type
/// corresponding to the superclass
///
/// For classes declared in Rust and implementing [`ObjectImpl`]:
///
/// - the struct must be `#[repr(C)]`;
///
/// - the first field of the struct must be of type
/// [`ParentField<T>`](ParentField), where `T` is the parent type
/// [`ObjectImpl::ParentType`]
///
/// - the first field of the `Class` must be of the class struct corresponding
/// to the superclass, which is `ObjectImpl::ParentType::Class`. `ParentField`
/// is not needed here.
///
/// In both cases, having a separate class type is not necessary if the subclass
/// does not add any field.
pub unsafe trait ObjectType: Sized {
/// The QOM class object corresponding to this struct. This is used
/// to automatically generate a `class_init` method.
type Class;
/// The name of the type, which can be passed to `object_new()` to
/// generate an instance of this type.
const TYPE_NAME: &'static CStr;
/// Return the receiver as an Object. This is always safe, even
/// if this type represents an interface.
fn as_object(&self) -> &Object {
unsafe { &*self.as_ptr().cast() }
}
/// Return the receiver as a const raw pointer to Object.
/// This is preferrable to `as_object_mut_ptr()` if a C
/// function only needs a `const Object *`.
fn as_object_ptr(&self) -> *const bindings::Object {
self.as_object().as_ptr()
}
/// Return the receiver as a mutable raw pointer to Object.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This cast is always safe, but because the result is mutable
/// and the incoming reference is not, this should only be used
/// for calls to C functions, and only if needed.
unsafe fn as_object_mut_ptr(&self) -> *mut bindings::Object {
self.as_object().as_mut_ptr()
}
}
/// Trait exposed by all structs corresponding to QOM interfaces.
/// Unlike `ObjectType`, it is implemented on the class type (which provides
/// the vtable for the interfaces).
///
/// # Safety
///
/// `TYPE` must match the contents of the `TypeInfo` as found in the C code;
/// right now, interfaces can only be declared in C.
pub unsafe trait InterfaceType: Sized {
/// The name of the type, which can be passed to
/// `object_class_dynamic_cast()` to obtain the pointer to the vtable
/// for this interface.
const TYPE_NAME: &'static CStr;
/// Return the vtable for the interface; `U` is the type that
/// lists the interface in its `TypeInfo`.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// This function is usually called by a `class_init` method in `U::Class`.
/// For example, `DeviceClass::class_init<T>` initializes its `Resettable`
/// interface as follows:
///
/// ```ignore
/// ResettableClass::cast::<DeviceState>(self).class_init::<T>();
/// ```
///
/// where `T` is the concrete subclass that is being initialized.
///
/// # Panics
///
/// Panic if the incoming argument if `T` does not implement the interface.
fn cast<U: ObjectType>(klass: &mut U::Class) -> &mut Self {
unsafe {
// SAFETY: upcasting to ObjectClass is always valid, and the
// return type is either NULL or the argument itself
let result: *mut Self = object_class_dynamic_cast(
(klass as *mut U::Class).cast(),
Self::TYPE_NAME.as_ptr(),
)
.cast();
result.as_mut().unwrap()
}
}
}
/// This trait provides safe casting operations for QOM objects to raw pointers,
/// to be used for example for FFI. The trait can be applied to any kind of
/// reference or smart pointers, and enforces correctness through the [`IsA`]
/// trait.
pub trait ObjectDeref: Deref
where
Self::Target: ObjectType,
{
/// Convert to a const Rust pointer, to be used for example for FFI.
/// The target pointer type must be the type of `self` or a superclass
fn as_ptr<U: ObjectType>(&self) -> *const U
where
Self::Target: IsA<U>,
{
let ptr: *const Self::Target = self.deref();
ptr.cast::<U>()
}
/// Convert to a mutable Rust pointer, to be used for example for FFI.
/// The target pointer type must be the type of `self` or a superclass.
/// Used to implement interior mutability for objects.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// This method is safe because only the actual dereference of the pointer
/// has to be unsafe. Bindings to C APIs will use it a lot, but care has
/// to be taken because it overrides the const-ness of `&self`.
fn as_mut_ptr<U: ObjectType>(&self) -> *mut U
where
Self::Target: IsA<U>,
{
#[allow(clippy::as_ptr_cast_mut)]
{
self.as_ptr::<U>().cast_mut()
}
}
}
/// Trait that adds extra functionality for `&T` where `T` is a QOM
/// object type. Allows conversion to/from C objects in generic code.
pub trait ObjectCast: ObjectDeref + Copy
where
Self::Target: ObjectType,
{
/// Safely convert from a derived type to one of its parent types.
///
/// This is always safe; the [`IsA`] trait provides static verification
/// trait that `Self` dereferences to `U` or a child of `U`.
fn upcast<'a, U: ObjectType>(self) -> &'a U
where
Self::Target: IsA<U>,
Self: 'a,
{
// SAFETY: soundness is declared via IsA<U>, which is an unsafe trait
unsafe { self.unsafe_cast::<U>() }
}
/// Attempt to convert to a derived type.
///
/// Returns `None` if the object is not actually of type `U`. This is
/// verified at runtime by checking the object's type information.
fn downcast<'a, U: IsA<Self::Target>>(self) -> Option<&'a U>
where
Self: 'a,
{
self.dynamic_cast::<U>()
}
/// Attempt to convert between any two types in the QOM hierarchy.
///
/// Returns `None` if the object is not actually of type `U`. This is
/// verified at runtime by checking the object's type information.
fn dynamic_cast<'a, U: ObjectType>(self) -> Option<&'a U>
where
Self: 'a,
{
unsafe {
// SAFETY: upcasting to Object is always valid, and the
// return type is either NULL or the argument itself
let result: *const U =
object_dynamic_cast(self.as_object_mut_ptr(), U::TYPE_NAME.as_ptr()).cast();
result.as_ref()
}
}
/// Convert to any QOM type without verification.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// What safety? You need to know yourself that the cast is correct; only
/// use when performance is paramount. It is still better than a raw
/// pointer `cast()`, which does not even check that you remain in the
/// realm of QOM `ObjectType`s.
///
/// `unsafe_cast::<Object>()` is always safe.
unsafe fn unsafe_cast<'a, U: ObjectType>(self) -> &'a U
where
Self: 'a,
{
unsafe { &*(self.as_ptr::<Self::Target>().cast::<U>()) }
}
}
impl<T: ObjectType> ObjectDeref for &T {}
impl<T: ObjectType> ObjectCast for &T {}
impl<T: ObjectType> ObjectDeref for &mut T {}
/// Trait a type must implement to be registered with QEMU.
pub trait ObjectImpl: ObjectType + IsA<Object> {
/// The parent of the type. This should match the first field of the
/// struct that implements `ObjectImpl`, minus the `ParentField<_>` wrapper.
type ParentType: ObjectType;
/// Whether the object can be instantiated
const ABSTRACT: bool = false;
/// Function that is called to initialize an object. The parent class will
/// have already been initialized so the type is only responsible for
/// initializing its own members.
///
/// FIXME: The argument is not really a valid reference. `&mut
/// MaybeUninit<Self>` would be a better description.
const INSTANCE_INIT: Option<unsafe fn(&mut Self)> = None;
/// Function that is called to finish initialization of an object, once
/// `INSTANCE_INIT` functions have been called.
const INSTANCE_POST_INIT: Option<fn(&Self)> = None;
/// Called on descendent classes after all parent class initialization
/// has occurred, but before the class itself is initialized. This
/// is only useful if a class is not a leaf, and can be used to undo
/// the effects of copying the contents of the parent's class struct
/// to the descendants.
const CLASS_BASE_INIT: Option<
unsafe extern "C" fn(klass: *mut ObjectClass, data: *const c_void),
> = None;
const TYPE_INFO: TypeInfo = TypeInfo {
name: Self::TYPE_NAME.as_ptr(),
parent: Self::ParentType::TYPE_NAME.as_ptr(),
instance_size: core::mem::size_of::<Self>(),
instance_align: core::mem::align_of::<Self>(),
instance_init: match Self::INSTANCE_INIT {
None => None,
Some(_) => Some(rust_instance_init::<Self>),
},
instance_post_init: match Self::INSTANCE_POST_INIT {
None => None,
Some(_) => Some(rust_instance_post_init::<Self>),
},
instance_finalize: Some(drop_object::<Self>),
abstract_: Self::ABSTRACT,
class_size: core::mem::size_of::<Self::Class>(),
class_init: Some(rust_class_init::<Self>),
class_base_init: Self::CLASS_BASE_INIT,
class_data: core::ptr::null(),
interfaces: core::ptr::null(),
};
// methods on ObjectClass
const UNPARENT: Option<fn(&Self)> = None;
/// Store into the argument the virtual method implementations
/// for `Self`. On entry, the virtual method pointers are set to
/// the default values coming from the parent classes; the function
/// can change them to override virtual methods of a parent class.
///
/// Usually defined simply as `Self::Class::class_init::<Self>`;
/// however a default implementation cannot be included here, because the
/// bounds that the `Self::Class::class_init` method places on `Self` are
/// not known in advance.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// While `klass`'s parent class is initialized on entry, the other fields
/// are all zero; it is therefore assumed that all fields in `T` can be
/// zeroed, otherwise it would not be possible to provide the class as a
/// `&mut T`. TODO: it may be possible to add an unsafe trait that checks
/// that all fields *after the parent class* (but not the parent class
/// itself) are Zeroable. This unsafe trait can be added via a derive
/// macro.
const CLASS_INIT: fn(&mut Self::Class);
}
/// # Safety
///
/// We expect the FFI user of this function to pass a valid pointer that
/// can be downcasted to type `T`. We also expect the device is
/// readable/writeable from one thread at any time.
unsafe extern "C" fn rust_unparent_fn<T: ObjectImpl>(dev: *mut bindings::Object) {
let state = NonNull::new(dev).unwrap().cast::<T>();
T::UNPARENT.unwrap()(unsafe { state.as_ref() });
}
impl ObjectClass {
/// Fill in the virtual methods of `ObjectClass` based on the definitions in
/// the `ObjectImpl` trait.
pub fn class_init<T: ObjectImpl>(&mut self) {
if <T as ObjectImpl>::UNPARENT.is_some() {
self.unparent = Some(rust_unparent_fn::<T>);
}
}
}
unsafe impl ObjectType for Object {
type Class = ObjectClass;
const TYPE_NAME: &'static CStr =
unsafe { CStr::from_bytes_with_nul_unchecked(bindings::TYPE_OBJECT) };
}
/// A reference-counted pointer to a QOM object.
///
/// `Owned<T>` wraps `T` with automatic reference counting. It increases the
/// reference count when created via [`Owned::from`] or cloned, and decreases
/// it when dropped. This ensures that the reference count remains elevated
/// as long as any `Owned<T>` references to it exist.
///
/// `Owned<T>` can be used for two reasons:
/// * because the lifetime of the QOM object is unknown and someone else could
/// take a reference (similar to `Arc<T>`, for example): in this case, the
/// object can escape and outlive the Rust struct that contains the `Owned<T>`
/// field;
///
/// * to ensure that the object stays alive until after `Drop::drop` is called
/// on the Rust struct: in this case, the object will always die together with
/// the Rust struct that contains the `Owned<T>` field.
///
/// Child properties are an example of the second case: in C, an object that
/// is created with `object_initialize_child` will die *before*
/// `instance_finalize` is called, whereas Rust expects the struct to have valid
/// contents when `Drop::drop` is called. Therefore Rust structs that have
/// child properties need to keep a reference to the child object. Right now
/// this can be done with `Owned<T>`; in the future one might have a separate
/// `Child<'parent, T>` smart pointer that keeps a reference to a `T`, like
/// `Owned`, but does not allow cloning.
///
/// Note that dropping an `Owned<T>` requires the big QEMU lock to be taken.
#[repr(transparent)]
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Hash, PartialOrd, Ord)]
pub struct Owned<T: ObjectType>(NonNull<T>);
// The following rationale for safety is taken from Linux's kernel::sync::Arc.
// SAFETY: It is safe to send `Owned<T>` to another thread when the underlying
// `T` is `Sync` because it effectively means sharing `&T` (which is safe
// because `T` is `Sync`); additionally, it needs `T` to be `Send` because any
// thread that has an `Owned<T>` may ultimately access `T` using a
// mutable reference when the reference count reaches zero and `T` is dropped.
unsafe impl<T: ObjectType + Send + Sync> Send for Owned<T> {}
// SAFETY: It is safe to send `&Owned<T>` to another thread when the underlying
// `T` is `Sync` because it effectively means sharing `&T` (which is safe
// because `T` is `Sync`); additionally, it needs `T` to be `Send` because any
// thread that has a `&Owned<T>` may clone it and get an `Owned<T>` on that
// thread, so the thread may ultimately access `T` using a mutable reference
// when the reference count reaches zero and `T` is dropped.
unsafe impl<T: ObjectType + Sync + Send> Sync for Owned<T> {}
impl<T: ObjectType> Owned<T> {
/// Convert a raw C pointer into an owned reference to the QOM
/// object it points to. The object's reference count will be
/// decreased when the `Owned` is dropped.
///
/// # Panics
///
/// Panics if `ptr` is NULL.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The caller must indeed own a reference to the QOM object.
/// The object must not be embedded in another unless the outer
/// object is guaranteed to have a longer lifetime.
///
/// A raw pointer obtained via [`Owned::into_raw()`] can always be passed
/// back to `from_raw()` (assuming the original `Owned` was valid!),
/// since the owned reference remains there between the calls to
/// `into_raw()` and `from_raw()`.
pub unsafe fn from_raw(ptr: *const T) -> Self {
// SAFETY NOTE: while NonNull requires a mutable pointer, only
// Deref is implemented so the pointer passed to from_raw
// remains const
Owned(NonNull::new(ptr.cast_mut()).unwrap())
}
/// Obtain a raw C pointer from a reference. `src` is consumed
/// and the reference is leaked.
#[allow(clippy::missing_const_for_fn)]
pub fn into_raw(src: Owned<T>) -> *mut T {
let src = ManuallyDrop::new(src);
src.0.as_ptr()
}
/// Increase the reference count of a QOM object and return
/// a new owned reference to it.
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The object must not be embedded in another, unless the outer
/// object is guaranteed to have a longer lifetime.
pub unsafe fn from(obj: &T) -> Self {
unsafe {
object_ref(obj.as_object_mut_ptr().cast::<c_void>());
// SAFETY NOTE: while NonNull requires a mutable pointer, only
// Deref is implemented so the reference passed to from_raw
// remains shared
Owned(NonNull::new_unchecked(obj.as_mut_ptr()))
}
}
}
impl<T: ObjectType> Clone for Owned<T> {
fn clone(&self) -> Self {
// SAFETY: creation method is unsafe; whoever calls it has
// responsibility that the pointer is valid, and remains valid
// throughout the lifetime of the `Owned<T>` and its clones.
unsafe { Owned::from(self.deref()) }
}
}
impl<T: ObjectType> Deref for Owned<T> {
type Target = T;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
// SAFETY: creation method is unsafe; whoever calls it has
// responsibility that the pointer is valid, and remains valid
// throughout the lifetime of the `Owned<T>` and its clones.
// With that guarantee, reference counting ensures that
// the object remains alive.
unsafe { &*self.0.as_ptr() }
}
}
impl<T: ObjectType> ObjectDeref for Owned<T> {}
impl<T: ObjectType> Drop for Owned<T> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
assert!(bql_locked());
// SAFETY: creation method is unsafe, and whoever calls it has
// responsibility that the pointer is valid, and remains valid
// throughout the lifetime of the `Owned<T>` and its clones.
unsafe {
object_unref(self.as_object_mut_ptr().cast::<c_void>());
}
}
}
impl<T: IsA<Object>> fmt::Debug for Owned<T> {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
self.deref().debug_fmt(f)
}
}
/// Trait for class methods exposed by the Object class. The methods can be
/// called on all objects that have the trait `IsA<Object>`.
///
/// The trait should only be used through the blanket implementation,
/// which guarantees safety via `IsA`
pub trait ObjectClassMethods: IsA<Object> {
/// Return a new reference counted instance of this class
fn new() -> Owned<Self> {
assert!(bql_locked());
// SAFETY: the object created by object_new is allocated on
// the heap and has a reference count of 1
unsafe {
let raw_obj = object_new(Self::TYPE_NAME.as_ptr());
let obj = Object::from_raw(raw_obj).unsafe_cast::<Self>();
Owned::from_raw(obj)
}
}
}
/// Trait for methods exposed by the Object class. The methods can be
/// called on all objects that have the trait `IsA<Object>`.
///
/// The trait should only be used through the blanket implementation,
/// which guarantees safety via `IsA`
pub trait ObjectMethods: ObjectDeref
where
Self::Target: IsA<Object>,
{
/// Return the name of the type of `self`
fn typename(&self) -> std::borrow::Cow<'_, str> {
let obj = self.upcast::<Object>();
// SAFETY: safety of this is the requirement for implementing IsA
// The result of the C API has static lifetime
unsafe {
let p = object_get_typename(obj.as_mut_ptr());
CStr::from_ptr(p).to_string_lossy()
}
}
fn get_class(&self) -> &'static <Self::Target as ObjectType>::Class {
let obj = self.upcast::<Object>();
// SAFETY: all objects can call object_get_class; the actual class
// type is guaranteed by the implementation of `ObjectType` and
// `ObjectImpl`.
let klass: &'static <Self::Target as ObjectType>::Class =
unsafe { &*object_get_class(obj.as_mut_ptr()).cast() };
klass
}
/// Convenience function for implementing the Debug trait
fn debug_fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_tuple(&self.typename())
.field(&(self as *const Self))
.finish()
}
}
impl<T> ObjectClassMethods for T where T: IsA<Object> {}
impl<R: ObjectDeref> ObjectMethods for R where R::Target: IsA<Object> {}