std/io/error/repr_bitpacked.rs
1//! This is a densely packed error representation which is used on targets with
2//! 64-bit pointers.
3//!
4//! (Note that `bitpacked` vs `unpacked` here has no relationship to
5//! `#[repr(packed)]`, it just refers to attempting to use any available bits in
6//! a more clever manner than `rustc`'s default layout algorithm would).
7//!
8//! Conceptually, it stores the same data as the "unpacked" equivalent we use on
9//! other targets. Specifically, you can imagine it as an optimized version of
10//! the following enum (which is roughly equivalent to what's stored by
11//! `repr_unpacked::Repr`, e.g. `super::ErrorData<Box<Custom>>`):
12//!
13//! ```ignore (exposition-only)
14//! enum ErrorData {
15//! Os(i32),
16//! Simple(ErrorKind),
17//! SimpleMessage(&'static SimpleMessage),
18//! Custom(Box<Custom>),
19//! }
20//! ```
21//!
22//! However, it packs this data into a 64bit non-zero value.
23//!
24//! This optimization not only allows `io::Error` to occupy a single pointer,
25//! but improves `io::Result` as well, especially for situations like
26//! `io::Result<()>` (which is now 64 bits) or `io::Result<u64>` (which is now
27//! 128 bits), which are quite common.
28//!
29//! # Layout
30//! Tagged values are 64 bits, with the 2 least significant bits used for the
31//! tag. This means there are 4 "variants":
32//!
33//! - **Tag 0b00**: The first variant is equivalent to
34//! `ErrorData::SimpleMessage`, and holds a `&'static SimpleMessage` directly.
35//!
36//! `SimpleMessage` has an alignment >= 4 (which is requested with
37//! `#[repr(align)]` and checked statically at the bottom of this file), which
38//! means every `&'static SimpleMessage` should have the both tag bits as 0,
39//! meaning its tagged and untagged representation are equivalent.
40//!
41//! This means we can skip tagging it, which is necessary as this variant can
42//! be constructed from a `const fn`, which probably cannot tag pointers (or
43//! at least it would be difficult).
44//!
45//! - **Tag 0b01**: The other pointer variant holds the data for
46//! `ErrorData::Custom` and the remaining 62 bits are used to store a
47//! `Box<Custom>`. `Custom` also has alignment >= 4, so the bottom two bits
48//! are free to use for the tag.
49//!
50//! The only important thing to note is that `ptr::wrapping_add` and
51//! `ptr::wrapping_sub` are used to tag the pointer, rather than bitwise
52//! operations. This should preserve the pointer's provenance, which would
53//! otherwise be lost.
54//!
55//! - **Tag 0b10**: Holds the data for `ErrorData::Os(i32)`. We store the `i32`
56//! in the pointer's most significant 32 bits, and don't use the bits `2..32`
57//! for anything. Using the top 32 bits is just to let us easily recover the
58//! `i32` code with the correct sign.
59//!
60//! - **Tag 0b11**: Holds the data for `ErrorData::Simple(ErrorKind)`. This
61//! stores the `ErrorKind` in the top 32 bits as well, although it doesn't
62//! occupy nearly that many. Most of the bits are unused here, but it's not
63//! like we need them for anything else yet.
64//!
65//! # Use of `NonNull<()>`
66//!
67//! Everything is stored in a `NonNull<()>`, which is odd, but actually serves a
68//! purpose.
69//!
70//! Conceptually you might think of this more like:
71//!
72//! ```ignore (exposition-only)
73//! union Repr {
74//! // holds integer (Simple/Os) variants, and
75//! // provides access to the tag bits.
76//! bits: NonZero<u64>,
77//! // Tag is 0, so this is stored untagged.
78//! msg: &'static SimpleMessage,
79//! // Tagged (offset) `Box<Custom>` pointer.
80//! tagged_custom: NonNull<()>,
81//! }
82//! ```
83//!
84//! But there are a few problems with this:
85//!
86//! 1. Union access is equivalent to a transmute, so this representation would
87//! require we transmute between integers and pointers in at least one
88//! direction, which may be UB (and even if not, it is likely harder for a
89//! compiler to reason about than explicit ptr->int operations).
90//!
91//! 2. Even if all fields of a union have a niche, the union itself doesn't,
92//! although this may change in the future. This would make things like
93//! `io::Result<()>` and `io::Result<usize>` larger, which defeats part of
94//! the motivation of this bitpacking.
95//!
96//! Storing everything in a `NonZero<usize>` (or some other integer) would be a
97//! bit more traditional for pointer tagging, but it would lose provenance
98//! information, couldn't be constructed from a `const fn`, and would probably
99//! run into other issues as well.
100//!
101//! The `NonNull<()>` seems like the only alternative, even if it's fairly odd
102//! to use a pointer type to store something that may hold an integer, some of
103//! the time.
104
105use core::marker::PhantomData;
106use core::num::NonZeroUsize;
107use core::ptr::NonNull;
108
109use super::{Custom, ErrorData, ErrorKind, RawOsError, SimpleMessage};
110
111// The 2 least-significant bits are used as tag.
112const TAG_MASK: usize = 0b11;
113const TAG_SIMPLE_MESSAGE: usize = 0b00;
114const TAG_CUSTOM: usize = 0b01;
115const TAG_OS: usize = 0b10;
116const TAG_SIMPLE: usize = 0b11;
117
118/// The internal representation.
119///
120/// See the module docs for more, this is just a way to hack in a check that we
121/// indeed are not unwind-safe.
122///
123/// ```compile_fail,E0277
124/// fn is_unwind_safe<T: core::panic::UnwindSafe>() {}
125/// is_unwind_safe::<std::io::Error>();
126/// ```
127#[repr(transparent)]
128#[rustc_insignificant_dtor]
129pub(super) struct Repr(NonNull<()>, PhantomData<ErrorData<Box<Custom>>>);
130
131// All the types `Repr` stores internally are Send + Sync, and so is it.
132unsafe impl Send for Repr {}
133unsafe impl Sync for Repr {}
134
135impl Repr {
136 pub(super) fn new_custom(b: Box<Custom>) -> Self {
137 let p = Box::into_raw(b).cast::<u8>();
138 // Should only be possible if an allocator handed out a pointer with
139 // wrong alignment.
140 debug_assert_eq!(p.addr() & TAG_MASK, 0);
141 // Note: We know `TAG_CUSTOM <= size_of::<Custom>()` (static_assert at
142 // end of file), and both the start and end of the expression must be
143 // valid without address space wraparound due to `Box`'s semantics.
144 //
145 // This means it would be correct to implement this using `ptr::add`
146 // (rather than `ptr::wrapping_add`), but it's unclear this would give
147 // any benefit, so we just use `wrapping_add` instead.
148 let tagged = p.wrapping_add(TAG_CUSTOM).cast::<()>();
149 // Safety: `TAG_CUSTOM + p` is the same as `TAG_CUSTOM | p`,
150 // because `p`'s alignment means it isn't allowed to have any of the
151 // `TAG_BITS` set (you can verify that addition and bitwise-or are the
152 // same when the operands have no bits in common using a truth table).
153 //
154 // Then, `TAG_CUSTOM | p` is not zero, as that would require
155 // `TAG_CUSTOM` and `p` both be zero, and neither is (as `p` came from a
156 // box, and `TAG_CUSTOM` just... isn't zero -- it's `0b01`). Therefore,
157 // `TAG_CUSTOM + p` isn't zero and so `tagged` can't be, and the
158 // `new_unchecked` is safe.
159 let res = Self(unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(tagged) }, PhantomData);
160 // quickly smoke-check we encoded the right thing (This generally will
161 // only run in std's tests, unless the user uses -Zbuild-std)
162 debug_assert!(matches!(res.data(), ErrorData::Custom(_)), "repr(custom) encoding failed");
163 res
164 }
165
166 #[inline]
167 pub(super) fn new_os(code: RawOsError) -> Self {
168 let utagged = ((code as usize) << 32) | TAG_OS;
169 // Safety: `TAG_OS` is not zero, so the result of the `|` is not 0.
170 let res = Self(
171 NonNull::without_provenance(unsafe { NonZeroUsize::new_unchecked(utagged) }),
172 PhantomData,
173 );
174 // quickly smoke-check we encoded the right thing (This generally will
175 // only run in std's tests, unless the user uses -Zbuild-std)
176 debug_assert!(
177 matches!(res.data(), ErrorData::Os(c) if c == code),
178 "repr(os) encoding failed for {code}"
179 );
180 res
181 }
182
183 #[inline]
184 pub(super) fn new_simple(kind: ErrorKind) -> Self {
185 let utagged = ((kind as usize) << 32) | TAG_SIMPLE;
186 // Safety: `TAG_SIMPLE` is not zero, so the result of the `|` is not 0.
187 let res = Self(
188 NonNull::without_provenance(unsafe { NonZeroUsize::new_unchecked(utagged) }),
189 PhantomData,
190 );
191 // quickly smoke-check we encoded the right thing (This generally will
192 // only run in std's tests, unless the user uses -Zbuild-std)
193 debug_assert!(
194 matches!(res.data(), ErrorData::Simple(k) if k == kind),
195 "repr(simple) encoding failed {:?}",
196 kind,
197 );
198 res
199 }
200
201 #[inline]
202 pub(super) const fn new_simple_message(m: &'static SimpleMessage) -> Self {
203 // Safety: References are never null.
204 Self(unsafe { NonNull::new_unchecked(m as *const _ as *mut ()) }, PhantomData)
205 }
206
207 #[inline]
208 pub(super) fn data(&self) -> ErrorData<&Custom> {
209 // Safety: We're a Repr, decode_repr is fine.
210 unsafe { decode_repr(self.0, |c| &*c) }
211 }
212
213 #[inline]
214 pub(super) fn data_mut(&mut self) -> ErrorData<&mut Custom> {
215 // Safety: We're a Repr, decode_repr is fine.
216 unsafe { decode_repr(self.0, |c| &mut *c) }
217 }
218
219 #[inline]
220 pub(super) fn into_data(self) -> ErrorData<Box<Custom>> {
221 let this = core::mem::ManuallyDrop::new(self);
222 // Safety: We're a Repr, decode_repr is fine. The `Box::from_raw` is
223 // safe because we prevent double-drop using `ManuallyDrop`.
224 unsafe { decode_repr(this.0, |p| Box::from_raw(p)) }
225 }
226}
227
228impl Drop for Repr {
229 #[inline]
230 fn drop(&mut self) {
231 // Safety: We're a Repr, decode_repr is fine. The `Box::from_raw` is
232 // safe because we're being dropped.
233 unsafe {
234 let _ = decode_repr(self.0, |p| Box::<Custom>::from_raw(p));
235 }
236 }
237}
238
239// Shared helper to decode a `Repr`'s internal pointer into an ErrorData.
240//
241// Safety: `ptr`'s bits should be encoded as described in the document at the
242// top (it should `some_repr.0`)
243#[inline]
244unsafe fn decode_repr<C, F>(ptr: NonNull<()>, make_custom: F) -> ErrorData<C>
245where
246 F: FnOnce(*mut Custom) -> C,
247{
248 let bits = ptr.as_ptr().addr();
249 match bits & TAG_MASK {
250 TAG_OS => {
251 let code = ((bits as i64) >> 32) as RawOsError;
252 ErrorData::Os(code)
253 }
254 TAG_SIMPLE => {
255 let kind_bits = (bits >> 32) as u32;
256 let kind = kind_from_prim(kind_bits).unwrap_or_else(|| {
257 debug_assert!(false, "Invalid io::error::Repr bits: `Repr({:#018x})`", bits);
258 // This means the `ptr` passed in was not valid, which violates
259 // the unsafe contract of `decode_repr`.
260 //
261 // Using this rather than unwrap meaningfully improves the code
262 // for callers which only care about one variant (usually
263 // `Custom`)
264 unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() };
265 });
266 ErrorData::Simple(kind)
267 }
268 TAG_SIMPLE_MESSAGE => {
269 // SAFETY: per tag
270 unsafe { ErrorData::SimpleMessage(&*ptr.cast::<SimpleMessage>().as_ptr()) }
271 }
272 TAG_CUSTOM => {
273 // It would be correct for us to use `ptr::byte_sub` here (see the
274 // comment above the `wrapping_add` call in `new_custom` for why),
275 // but it isn't clear that it makes a difference, so we don't.
276 let custom = ptr.as_ptr().wrapping_byte_sub(TAG_CUSTOM).cast::<Custom>();
277 ErrorData::Custom(make_custom(custom))
278 }
279 _ => {
280 // Can't happen, and compiler can tell
281 unreachable!();
282 }
283 }
284}
285
286// This compiles to the same code as the check+transmute, but doesn't require
287// unsafe, or to hard-code max ErrorKind or its size in a way the compiler
288// couldn't verify.
289#[inline]
290fn kind_from_prim(ek: u32) -> Option<ErrorKind> {
291 macro_rules! from_prim {
292 ($prim:expr => $Enum:ident { $($Variant:ident),* $(,)? }) => {{
293 // Force a compile error if the list gets out of date.
294 const _: fn(e: $Enum) = |e: $Enum| match e {
295 $($Enum::$Variant => ()),*
296 };
297 match $prim {
298 $(v if v == ($Enum::$Variant as _) => Some($Enum::$Variant),)*
299 _ => None,
300 }
301 }}
302 }
303 from_prim!(ek => ErrorKind {
304 NotFound,
305 PermissionDenied,
306 ConnectionRefused,
307 ConnectionReset,
308 HostUnreachable,
309 NetworkUnreachable,
310 ConnectionAborted,
311 NotConnected,
312 AddrInUse,
313 AddrNotAvailable,
314 NetworkDown,
315 BrokenPipe,
316 AlreadyExists,
317 WouldBlock,
318 NotADirectory,
319 IsADirectory,
320 DirectoryNotEmpty,
321 ReadOnlyFilesystem,
322 FilesystemLoop,
323 StaleNetworkFileHandle,
324 InvalidInput,
325 InvalidData,
326 TimedOut,
327 WriteZero,
328 StorageFull,
329 NotSeekable,
330 QuotaExceeded,
331 FileTooLarge,
332 ResourceBusy,
333 ExecutableFileBusy,
334 Deadlock,
335 CrossesDevices,
336 TooManyLinks,
337 InvalidFilename,
338 ArgumentListTooLong,
339 Interrupted,
340 Other,
341 UnexpectedEof,
342 Unsupported,
343 OutOfMemory,
344 InProgress,
345 Uncategorized,
346 })
347}
348
349// Some static checking to alert us if a change breaks any of the assumptions
350// that our encoding relies on for correctness and soundness. (Some of these are
351// a bit overly thorough/cautious, admittedly)
352//
353// If any of these are hit on a platform that std supports, we should likely
354// just use `repr_unpacked.rs` there instead (unless the fix is easy).
355macro_rules! static_assert {
356 ($condition:expr) => {
357 const _: () = assert!($condition);
358 };
359 (@usize_eq: $lhs:expr, $rhs:expr) => {
360 const _: [(); $lhs] = [(); $rhs];
361 };
362}
363
364// The bitpacking we use requires pointers be exactly 64 bits.
365static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<NonNull<()>>(), 8);
366
367// We also require pointers and usize be the same size.
368static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<NonNull<()>>(), size_of::<usize>());
369
370// `Custom` and `SimpleMessage` need to be thin pointers.
371static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<&'static SimpleMessage>(), 8);
372static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<Box<Custom>>(), 8);
373
374static_assert!((TAG_MASK + 1).is_power_of_two());
375// And they must have sufficient alignment.
376static_assert!(align_of::<SimpleMessage>() >= TAG_MASK + 1);
377static_assert!(align_of::<Custom>() >= TAG_MASK + 1);
378
379static_assert!(@usize_eq: TAG_MASK & TAG_SIMPLE_MESSAGE, TAG_SIMPLE_MESSAGE);
380static_assert!(@usize_eq: TAG_MASK & TAG_CUSTOM, TAG_CUSTOM);
381static_assert!(@usize_eq: TAG_MASK & TAG_OS, TAG_OS);
382static_assert!(@usize_eq: TAG_MASK & TAG_SIMPLE, TAG_SIMPLE);
383
384// This is obviously true (`TAG_CUSTOM` is `0b01`), but in `Repr::new_custom` we
385// offset a pointer by this value, and expect it to both be within the same
386// object, and to not wrap around the address space. See the comment in that
387// function for further details.
388//
389// Actually, at the moment we use `ptr::wrapping_add`, not `ptr::add`, so this
390// check isn't needed for that one, although the assertion that we don't
391// actually wrap around in that wrapping_add does simplify the safety reasoning
392// elsewhere considerably.
393static_assert!(size_of::<Custom>() >= TAG_CUSTOM);
394
395// These two store a payload which is allowed to be zero, so they must be
396// non-zero to preserve the `NonNull`'s range invariant.
397static_assert!(TAG_OS != 0);
398static_assert!(TAG_SIMPLE != 0);
399// We can't tag `SimpleMessage`s, the tag must be 0.
400static_assert!(@usize_eq: TAG_SIMPLE_MESSAGE, 0);
401
402// Check that the point of all of this still holds.
403//
404// We'd check against `io::Error`, but *technically* it's allowed to vary,
405// as it's not `#[repr(transparent)]`/`#[repr(C)]`. We could add that, but
406// the `#[repr()]` would show up in rustdoc, which might be seen as a stable
407// commitment.
408static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<Repr>(), 8);
409static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<Option<Repr>>(), 8);
410static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<Result<(), Repr>>(), 8);
411static_assert!(@usize_eq: size_of::<Result<usize, Repr>>(), 16);