* [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 1/5] rust: devres: style for imports Zhi Wang
` (4 more replies)
0 siblings, 5 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang
In the NVIDIA vGPU RFC [1], the PCI configuration space access is
required in nova-core for preparing gspVFInfo when vGPU support is
enabled. This series is the following up of the discussion with Danilo
for how to introduce support of PCI configuration space access in Rust
PCI abstractions. Alice/Alex/I had a discussion of the next steps of
this patch series in LPC 2025. We agreed that first introducing the
functionality before the BoundedInteger work and other refinement is
settled. [2]
The repo with the patches can be found at [3].
v9:
- Rebase the patches to the latest driver-core-testing.
- Move ConfigSpaceSize to pci/io.rs. (Danilo)
- Refine docs. (Danilo)
- Compiling test on Tyr. (Danilo)
v8:
- Rebase to latest driver-core-testing branch.
- Refinement of traits name and hierarchy: (Alice)
* Rename IoInfallible trait to IoKnownSize trait.
* Keep Infallible helpers in Io trait.
v7:
- Rebase to latest driver-core-testing branch.
- Introduce Io64 trait. (Alice)
- Add docs for call_{mmio, config}_{read, write}() macros. (Alex)
- Improve the define_{read, write} macros. (Alex)
- Add SAFETY/CAST in call_config_{read, write}. (Joel)
- Fix typo of method name. (Alex/Joel)
v6:
- Implement config_space() and config_space_extended() in device::Bound
lifecycle. (Danilo)
- Fix the "use" in the comment for generating proper rust docs, verify
the output of rustdoc. (Miguel)
- Improve the comments of PCI configuration space when checking the
output of rustdoc.
v5:
- Remove fallible accessors of PCI configuration space. (Danilo)
- Add #[repr(usize)] for enum ConfigSpace. (Danilo)
- Refine the handling of return value in read accessors. (Danilo)
- Add debug_assert!() in pdev::cfg_size(). (Danilo)
- Add ConfigSpace.as_raw() for extracting the raw value. (Danilo)
- Rebase the patches on top of driver-core-testing branch.
- Convert imports touched by this series to vertical style.
v4:
- Refactor the SIZE constant to be an associated constant. (Alice)
- Remove the default method implementations in the Io trait. (Alice)
- Make cfg_size() private. (Danilo/Bjorn)
- Implement the infallible accessors of ConfigSpace. (Danilo)
- Create a new Io64 trait specifically for 64-bit accessors. (Danilo)
- Provide two separate methods for driver: config_space() and
config_space_extended(). (Danilo)
- Update the sample driver to test the infallible accessors. (Danilo)
v3:
- Turn offset_valid() into a private function of kernel::io:Io. (Alex)
- Separate try and non-try variants. (Danilo)
- Move all the {try_}{read,write}{8,16,32,64} accessors to the I/O trait.
(Danilo)
- Replace the hardcoded MMIO type constraint with a generic trait bound
so that register! macro can be used in other places. (Danilo)
- Fix doctest. (John)
- Add an enum for PCI configuration space size. (Danilo)
- Refine the patch comments. (Bjorn)
v2:
- Factor out common trait as 'Io' and keep the rest routines in original
'Io' as 'Mmio'. (Danilo)
- Rename 'IoRaw' to 'MmioRaw'. Update the bus MMIO implementation to use
'MmioRaw'.
- Introduce pci::Device<Bound>::config_space(). (Danilo)
- Implement both infallible and fallible read/write routines, the device
driver decicdes which version should be used.
This ideas of this series are:
- Factor out common traits for other accessors to share the same
compiling/runtime check like before.
- Factor the MMIO read/write macros from the define_read! and
define_write! macros. Thus, define_{read, write}! can be used in other
backends.
In detail:
* Introduce `call_mmio_read!` and `call_mmio_write!` helper macros
to encapsulate the unsafe FFI calls.
* Update `define_read!` and `define_write!` macros to delegate to
the call macros.
* Export `define_read` and `define_write` so they can be reused
for other I/O backends (e.g. PCI config space).
- Implement the PCI configuration space access backend in PCI
abstractions.
- Add tests for config space routines in rust PCI sample driver.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20250903221111.3866249-1-zhiw@nvidia.com/
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/all/DEOMBKIRDXH6.2CF2MR2RB2W2C@nvidia.com/
[3] https://github.com/zhiwang-nvidia/nova-core/tree/rust-for-linux/pci-configuration-space-v9
Zhi Wang (5):
rust: devres: style for imports
rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
rust: io: factor out MMIO read/write macros
rust: pci: add config space read/write support
sample: rust: pci: add tests for config space routines
drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs | 1 +
drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs | 5 +-
drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs | 90 +++---
drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs | 1 +
rust/kernel/devres.rs | 30 +-
rust/kernel/io.rs | 374 +++++++++++++++++++------
rust/kernel/io/mem.rs | 16 +-
rust/kernel/io/poll.rs | 16 +-
rust/kernel/pci/io.rs | 163 ++++++++++-
samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs | 30 ++
10 files changed, 580 insertions(+), 146 deletions(-)
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [PATCH v9 1/5] rust: devres: style for imports
2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 ` Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait Zhi Wang
` (3 subsequent siblings)
4 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang, Miguel Ojeda
Convert all imports in the devres to use "kernel vertical" style.
Cc: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Cc: Miguel Ojeda <miguel.ojeda.sandonis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
---
rust/kernel/devres.rs | 16 +++++++++++++---
1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/rust/kernel/devres.rs b/rust/kernel/devres.rs
index db02f8b1788d..43089511bf76 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/devres.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/devres.rs
@@ -254,8 +254,12 @@ pub fn device(&self) -> &Device {
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
- /// # #![cfg(CONFIG_PCI)]
- /// # use kernel::{device::Core, devres::Devres, pci};
+ /// #![cfg(CONFIG_PCI)]
+ /// use kernel::{
+ /// device::Core,
+ /// devres::Devres,
+ /// pci, //
+ /// };
///
/// fn from_core(dev: &pci::Device<Core>, devres: Devres<pci::Bar<0x4>>) -> Result {
/// let bar = devres.access(dev.as_ref())?;
@@ -358,7 +362,13 @@ fn register_foreign<P>(dev: &Device<Bound>, data: P) -> Result
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
-/// use kernel::{device::{Bound, Device}, devres};
+/// use kernel::{
+/// device::{
+/// Bound,
+/// Device, //
+/// },
+/// devres, //
+/// };
///
/// /// Registration of e.g. a class device, IRQ, etc.
/// struct Registration;
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 1/5] rust: devres: style for imports Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 ` Zhi Wang
2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
2026-01-16 13:57 ` Markus Probst
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 3/5] rust: io: factor out MMIO read/write macros Zhi Wang
` (2 subsequent siblings)
4 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang
The previous Io<SIZE> type combined both the generic I/O access helpers
and MMIO implementation details in a single struct.
To establish a cleaner layering between the I/O interface and its concrete
backends, paving the way for supporting additional I/O mechanisms in the
future, Io<SIZE> need to be factored.
Factor the common helpers into new {Io, Io64} traits, and move the
MMIO-specific logic into a dedicated Mmio<SIZE> type implementing that
trait. Rename the IoRaw to MmioRaw and update the bus MMIO implementations
to use MmioRaw.
No functional change intended.
Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
Cc: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Cc: Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@kernel.org>
Cc: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
Cc: John Hubbard <jhubbard@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
---
drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs | 1 +
drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs | 5 +-
drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs | 90 +++++---
drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs | 1 +
rust/kernel/devres.rs | 14 +-
rust/kernel/io.rs | 291 +++++++++++++++++++------
rust/kernel/io/mem.rs | 16 +-
rust/kernel/io/poll.rs | 16 +-
rust/kernel/pci/io.rs | 12 +-
samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs | 2 +
10 files changed, 317 insertions(+), 131 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs b/drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs
index f46933aaa221..9f89bc73a775 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs
+++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs
@@ -11,6 +11,7 @@
use kernel::device::Bound;
use kernel::device::Device;
use kernel::devres::Devres;
+use kernel::io::IoKnownSize;
use kernel::prelude::*;
use crate::driver::IoMem;
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs
index 2d0369c49092..862cf7f27143 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs
+++ b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs
@@ -12,7 +12,10 @@
use kernel::{
device,
- io::poll::read_poll_timeout,
+ io::{
+ poll::read_poll_timeout,
+ Io, //
+ },
prelude::*,
time::{
delay::fsleep,
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs
index fd1a815fa57d..6c7d164937a0 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs
+++ b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs
@@ -369,16 +369,18 @@ impl $name {
/// Read the register from its address in `io`.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T>(io: &T) -> Self where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ pub(crate) fn read<T, I>(io: &T) -> Self where
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
Self(io.read32($offset))
}
/// Write the value contained in `self` to the register address in `io`.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T>(self, io: &T) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ pub(crate) fn write<T, I>(self, io: &T) where
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
io.write32(self.0, $offset)
}
@@ -386,11 +388,12 @@ pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T>(self, io: &T) where
/// Read the register from its address in `io` and run `f` on its value to obtain a new
/// value to write back.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn update<T, I, F>(
io: &T,
f: F,
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
let reg = f(Self::read(io));
@@ -408,12 +411,13 @@ impl $name {
/// Read the register from `io`, using the base address provided by `base` and adding
/// the register's offset to it.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn read<T, I, B>(
io: &T,
#[allow(unused_variables)]
base: &B,
) -> Self where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
const OFFSET: usize = $name::OFFSET;
@@ -428,13 +432,14 @@ pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// Write the value contained in `self` to `io`, using the base address provided by
/// `base` and adding the register's offset to it.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn write<T, I, B>(
self,
io: &T,
#[allow(unused_variables)]
base: &B,
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
const OFFSET: usize = $name::OFFSET;
@@ -449,12 +454,13 @@ pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// the register's offset to it, then run `f` on its value to obtain a new value to
/// write back.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, B, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn update<T, I, B, F>(
io: &T,
base: &B,
f: F,
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
@@ -474,11 +480,12 @@ impl $name {
/// Read the array register at index `idx` from its address in `io`.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T>(
+ pub(crate) fn read<T, I>(
io: &T,
idx: usize,
) -> Self where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
build_assert!(idx < Self::SIZE);
@@ -490,12 +497,13 @@ pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T>(
/// Write the value contained in `self` to the array register with index `idx` in `io`.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T>(
+ pub(crate) fn write<T, I>(
self,
io: &T,
idx: usize
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
build_assert!(idx < Self::SIZE);
@@ -507,12 +515,13 @@ pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T>(
/// Read the array register at index `idx` in `io` and run `f` on its value to obtain a
/// new value to write back.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn update<T, I, F>(
io: &T,
idx: usize,
f: F,
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
let reg = f(Self::read(io, idx));
@@ -524,11 +533,12 @@ pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, F>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_read<const SIZE: usize, T>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_read<T, I>(
io: &T,
idx: usize,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result<Self> where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
if idx < Self::SIZE {
Ok(Self::read(io, idx))
@@ -542,12 +552,13 @@ pub(crate) fn try_read<const SIZE: usize, T>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_write<const SIZE: usize, T>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_write<T, I>(
self,
io: &T,
idx: usize,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
{
if idx < Self::SIZE {
Ok(self.write(io, idx))
@@ -562,12 +573,13 @@ pub(crate) fn try_write<const SIZE: usize, T>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_update<const SIZE: usize, T, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_update<T, I, F>(
io: &T,
idx: usize,
f: F,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
if idx < Self::SIZE {
@@ -593,13 +605,14 @@ impl $name {
/// Read the array register at index `idx` from `io`, using the base address provided
/// by `base` and adding the register's offset to it.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn read<T, I, B>(
io: &T,
#[allow(unused_variables)]
base: &B,
idx: usize,
) -> Self where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
build_assert!(idx < Self::SIZE);
@@ -614,14 +627,15 @@ pub(crate) fn read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// Write the value contained in `self` to `io`, using the base address provided by
/// `base` and adding the offset of array register `idx` to it.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn write<T, I, B>(
self,
io: &T,
#[allow(unused_variables)]
base: &B,
idx: usize
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
build_assert!(idx < Self::SIZE);
@@ -636,13 +650,14 @@ pub(crate) fn write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// by `base` and adding the register's offset to it, then run `f` on its value to
/// obtain a new value to write back.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, B, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn update<T, I, B, F>(
io: &T,
base: &B,
idx: usize,
f: F,
) where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
@@ -656,12 +671,13 @@ pub(crate) fn update<const SIZE: usize, T, B, F>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_read<T, I, B>(
io: &T,
base: &B,
idx: usize,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result<Self> where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
if idx < Self::SIZE {
@@ -677,13 +693,14 @@ pub(crate) fn try_read<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_write<T, I, B>(
self,
io: &T,
base: &B,
idx: usize,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
{
if idx < Self::SIZE {
@@ -700,13 +717,14 @@ pub(crate) fn try_write<const SIZE: usize, T, B>(
/// The validity of `idx` is checked at run-time, and `EINVAL` is returned is the
/// access was out-of-bounds.
#[inline(always)]
- pub(crate) fn try_update<const SIZE: usize, T, B, F>(
+ pub(crate) fn try_update<T, I, B, F>(
io: &T,
base: &B,
idx: usize,
f: F,
) -> ::kernel::error::Result where
- T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = ::kernel::io::Io<SIZE>>,
+ T: ::core::ops::Deref<Target = I>,
+ I: ::kernel::io::IoKnownSize,
B: crate::regs::macros::RegisterBase<$base>,
F: ::core::ops::FnOnce(Self) -> Self,
{
diff --git a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs
index abf423560ff4..fe33b519e4d8 100644
--- a/drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs
+++ b/drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs
@@ -6,6 +6,7 @@
use kernel::{
device,
+ io::Io,
prelude::*,
ptr::{
Alignable,
diff --git a/rust/kernel/devres.rs b/rust/kernel/devres.rs
index 43089511bf76..dfaddac2af59 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/devres.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/devres.rs
@@ -73,15 +73,16 @@ struct Inner<T: Send> {
/// },
/// devres::Devres,
/// io::{
-/// Io,
-/// IoRaw,
+/// IoKnownSize,
+/// Mmio,
+/// MmioRaw,
/// PhysAddr,
/// },
/// };
/// use core::ops::Deref;
///
/// // See also [`pci::Bar`] for a real example.
-/// struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize>(IoRaw<SIZE>);
+/// struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
///
/// impl<const SIZE: usize> IoMem<SIZE> {
/// /// # Safety
@@ -96,7 +97,7 @@ struct Inner<T: Send> {
/// return Err(ENOMEM);
/// }
///
-/// Ok(IoMem(IoRaw::new(addr as usize, SIZE)?))
+/// Ok(IoMem(MmioRaw::new(addr as usize, SIZE)?))
/// }
/// }
///
@@ -108,11 +109,11 @@ struct Inner<T: Send> {
/// }
///
/// impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for IoMem<SIZE> {
-/// type Target = Io<SIZE>;
+/// type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
///
/// fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
/// // SAFETY: The memory range stored in `self` has been properly mapped in `Self::new`.
-/// unsafe { Io::from_raw(&self.0) }
+/// unsafe { Mmio::from_raw(&self.0) }
/// }
/// }
/// # fn no_run(dev: &Device<Bound>) -> Result<(), Error> {
@@ -258,6 +259,7 @@ pub fn device(&self) -> &Device {
/// use kernel::{
/// device::Core,
/// devres::Devres,
+ /// io::IoKnownSize,
/// pci, //
/// };
///
diff --git a/rust/kernel/io.rs b/rust/kernel/io.rs
index a97eb44a9a87..89d94e4fb1e3 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/io.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/io.rs
@@ -32,16 +32,16 @@
/// By itself, the existence of an instance of this structure does not provide any guarantees that
/// the represented MMIO region does exist or is properly mapped.
///
-/// Instead, the bus specific MMIO implementation must convert this raw representation into an `Io`
-/// instance providing the actual memory accessors. Only by the conversion into an `Io` structure
-/// any guarantees are given.
-pub struct IoRaw<const SIZE: usize = 0> {
+/// Instead, the bus specific MMIO implementation must convert this raw representation into an
+/// `Mmio` instance providing the actual memory accessors. Only by the conversion into an `Mmio`
+/// structure any guarantees are given.
+pub struct MmioRaw<const SIZE: usize = 0> {
addr: usize,
maxsize: usize,
}
-impl<const SIZE: usize> IoRaw<SIZE> {
- /// Returns a new `IoRaw` instance on success, an error otherwise.
+impl<const SIZE: usize> MmioRaw<SIZE> {
+ /// Returns a new `MmioRaw` instance on success, an error otherwise.
pub fn new(addr: usize, maxsize: usize) -> Result<Self> {
if maxsize < SIZE {
return Err(EINVAL);
@@ -81,14 +81,16 @@ pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
/// ffi::c_void,
/// io::{
/// Io,
-/// IoRaw,
+/// IoKnownSize,
+/// Mmio,
+/// MmioRaw,
/// PhysAddr,
/// },
/// };
/// use core::ops::Deref;
///
/// // See also `pci::Bar` for a real example.
-/// struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize>(IoRaw<SIZE>);
+/// struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
///
/// impl<const SIZE: usize> IoMem<SIZE> {
/// /// # Safety
@@ -103,7 +105,7 @@ pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
/// return Err(ENOMEM);
/// }
///
-/// Ok(IoMem(IoRaw::new(addr as usize, SIZE)?))
+/// Ok(IoMem(MmioRaw::new(addr as usize, SIZE)?))
/// }
/// }
///
@@ -115,11 +117,11 @@ pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
/// }
///
/// impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for IoMem<SIZE> {
-/// type Target = Io<SIZE>;
+/// type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
///
/// fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
/// // SAFETY: The memory range stored in `self` has been properly mapped in `Self::new`.
-/// unsafe { Io::from_raw(&self.0) }
+/// unsafe { Mmio::from_raw(&self.0) }
/// }
/// }
///
@@ -133,29 +135,31 @@ pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
/// # }
/// ```
#[repr(transparent)]
-pub struct Io<const SIZE: usize = 0>(IoRaw<SIZE>);
+pub struct Mmio<const SIZE: usize = 0>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
macro_rules! define_read {
- ($(#[$attr:meta])* $name:ident, $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident -> $type_name:ty) => {
+ (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $c_fn:ident -> $type_name:ty) => {
/// Read IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
/// time, the build will fail.
$(#[$attr])*
#[inline]
- pub fn $name(&self, offset: usize) -> $type_name {
+ $vis fn $name(&self, offset: usize) -> $type_name {
let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(addr as *const c_void) }
}
+ };
+ (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident -> $type_name:ty) => {
/// Read IO data from a given offset.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
/// out of bounds.
$(#[$attr])*
- pub fn $try_name(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<$type_name> {
+ $vis fn $try_name(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<$type_name> {
let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
@@ -165,26 +169,28 @@ pub fn $try_name(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<$type_name> {
}
macro_rules! define_write {
- ($(#[$attr:meta])* $name:ident, $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident <- $type_name:ty) => {
+ (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $c_fn:ident <- $type_name:ty) => {
/// Write IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
/// time, the build will fail.
$(#[$attr])*
#[inline]
- pub fn $name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) {
+ $vis fn $name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) {
let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(value, addr as *mut c_void) }
}
+ };
+ (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident <- $type_name:ty) => {
/// Write IO data from a given offset.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
/// out of bounds.
$(#[$attr])*
- pub fn $try_name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) -> Result {
+ $vis fn $try_name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) -> Result {
let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
// SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
@@ -194,43 +200,40 @@ pub fn $try_name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) -> Result {
};
}
-impl<const SIZE: usize> Io<SIZE> {
- /// Converts an `IoRaw` into an `Io` instance, providing the accessors to the MMIO mapping.
- ///
- /// # Safety
- ///
- /// Callers must ensure that `addr` is the start of a valid I/O mapped memory region of size
- /// `maxsize`.
- pub unsafe fn from_raw(raw: &IoRaw<SIZE>) -> &Self {
- // SAFETY: `Io` is a transparent wrapper around `IoRaw`.
- unsafe { &*core::ptr::from_ref(raw).cast() }
+/// Checks whether an access of type `U` at the given `offset`
+/// is valid within this region.
+#[inline]
+const fn offset_valid<U>(offset: usize, size: usize) -> bool {
+ let type_size = core::mem::size_of::<U>();
+ if let Some(end) = offset.checked_add(type_size) {
+ end <= size && offset % type_size == 0
+ } else {
+ false
}
+}
+
+/// Represents a region of I/O space of a fixed size.
+///
+/// This is an abstract representation to be implemented by arbitrary I/O
+/// backends (e.g. MMIO, I2C, etc.).
+///
+/// Provides common helpers for offset validation and address
+/// calculation on top of a base address and maximum size.
+pub trait IoBase {
+ /// Minimum usable size of this region.
+ const MIN_SIZE: usize;
/// Returns the base address of this mapping.
- #[inline]
- pub fn addr(&self) -> usize {
- self.0.addr()
- }
+ fn addr(&self) -> usize;
/// Returns the maximum size of this mapping.
- #[inline]
- pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
- self.0.maxsize()
- }
-
- #[inline]
- const fn offset_valid<U>(offset: usize, size: usize) -> bool {
- let type_size = core::mem::size_of::<U>();
- if let Some(end) = offset.checked_add(type_size) {
- end <= size && offset % type_size == 0
- } else {
- false
- }
- }
+ fn maxsize(&self) -> usize;
+ /// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
+ /// performing runtime bound checks.
#[inline]
fn io_addr<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<usize> {
- if !Self::offset_valid::<U>(offset, self.maxsize()) {
+ if !offset_valid::<U>(offset, self.maxsize()) {
return Err(EINVAL);
}
@@ -239,50 +242,198 @@ fn io_addr<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<usize> {
self.addr().checked_add(offset).ok_or(EINVAL)
}
+ /// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
+ /// performing compile-time bound checks.
#[inline]
fn io_addr_assert<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> usize {
- build_assert!(Self::offset_valid::<U>(offset, SIZE));
+ build_assert!(offset_valid::<U>(offset, Self::MIN_SIZE));
self.addr() + offset
}
+}
+
+/// Types implementing this trait (e.g. MMIO BARs or PCI config regions)
+/// can share the same IoKnownSize accessors.
+///
+/// In this context, "known size" represents the static guarantee regarding
+/// the minimum accessible size requested from the I/O backend.
+///
+/// Note that the actual size of the resource provided by the hardware
+/// (e.g., the physical BAR size) might be larger than this "known size".
+pub trait IoKnownSize: IoBase {
+ /// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8;
+
+ /// Infallible 16-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn read16(&self, offset: usize) -> u16;
+
+ /// Infallible 32-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn read32(&self, offset: usize) -> u32;
+
+ /// Infallible 8-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn write8(&self, value: u8, offset: usize);
+
+ /// Infallible 16-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn write16(&self, value: u16, offset: usize);
- define_read!(read8, try_read8, readb -> u8);
- define_read!(read16, try_read16, readw -> u16);
- define_read!(read32, try_read32, readl -> u32);
+ /// Infallible 32-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn write32(&self, value: u32, offset: usize);
+}
+
+/// Types implementing this trait (e.g. MMIO BARs or PCI config regions)
+/// can share the same Io accessors.
+///
+/// This trait defines the accessors for performing runtime-checked
+/// operations on an I/O region. Note that due to the runtime checks, these
+/// operations may be more expensive than those provided by
+/// [`IoKnownSize`].
+///
+/// Implement this trait when:
+/// - The I/O backend cannot guarantee a minimum accessible size for the
+/// region.
+/// - The I/O backend wishes to return meaningful error codes when the
+/// driver accesses the region.
+pub trait Io: IoBase {
+ /// Fallible 8-bit read with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_read8(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u8>;
+
+ /// Fallible 16-bit read with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_read16(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u16>;
+
+ /// Fallible 32-bit read with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_read32(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u32>;
+
+ /// Fallible 8-bit write with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_write8(&self, value: u8, offset: usize) -> Result;
+
+ /// Fallible 16-bit write with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_write16(&self, value: u16, offset: usize) -> Result;
+
+ /// Fallible 32-bit write with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_write32(&self, value: u32, offset: usize) -> Result;
+}
+
+/// Represents a region of I/O space of a fixed size with 64-bit accessors.
+/// Types implementing this trait can share the same IoKnownSize64
+/// accessors.
+#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
+pub trait IoKnownSize64: IoKnownSize {
+ /// Infallible 64-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64;
+
+ /// Infallible 64-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
+ fn write64(&self, value: u64, offset: usize);
+}
+
+/// Types implementing this trait can share the same Io64 accessors.
+#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
+pub trait Io64: Io {
+ /// Fallible 64-bit read with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_read64(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u64>;
+
+ /// Fallible 64-bit write with runtime bounds check.
+ fn try_write64(&self, value: u64, offset: usize) -> Result;
+}
+
+impl<const SIZE: usize> IoBase for Mmio<SIZE> {
+ const MIN_SIZE: usize = SIZE;
+
+ /// Returns the base address of this mapping.
+ #[inline]
+ fn addr(&self) -> usize {
+ self.0.addr()
+ }
+
+ /// Returns the maximum size of this mapping.
+ #[inline]
+ fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
+ self.0.maxsize()
+ }
+}
+
+impl<const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize for Mmio<SIZE> {
+ define_read!(infallible, read8, readb -> u8);
+ define_read!(infallible, read16, readw -> u16);
+ define_read!(infallible, read32, readl -> u32);
+
+ define_write!(infallible, write8, writeb <- u8);
+ define_write!(infallible, write16, writew <- u16);
+ define_write!(infallible, write32, writel <- u32);
+}
+
+impl<const SIZE: usize> Io for Mmio<SIZE> {
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read8, readb -> u8);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read16, readw -> u16);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read32, readl -> u32);
+
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write8, writeb <- u8);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write16, writew <- u16);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write32, writel <- u32);
+}
+
+#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
+impl<const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize64 for Mmio<SIZE> {
+ define_read!(infallible, read64, readq -> u64);
+
+ define_write!(infallible, write64, writeq <- u64);
+}
+
+#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
+impl<const SIZE: usize> Io64 for Mmio<SIZE> {
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read64, readq -> u64);
+
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write64, writeq <- u64);
+}
+
+impl<const SIZE: usize> Mmio<SIZE> {
+ /// Converts an `MmioRaw` into an `Mmio` instance, providing the accessors to the MMIO mapping.
+ ///
+ /// # Safety
+ ///
+ /// Callers must ensure that `addr` is the start of a valid I/O mapped memory region of size
+ /// `maxsize`.
+ pub unsafe fn from_raw(raw: &MmioRaw<SIZE>) -> &Self {
+ // SAFETY: `Mmio` is a transparent wrapper around `MmioRaw`.
+ unsafe { &*core::ptr::from_ref(raw).cast() }
+ }
+
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read8_relaxed, readb_relaxed -> u8);
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read16_relaxed, readw_relaxed -> u16);
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read32_relaxed, readl_relaxed -> u32);
define_read!(
+ infallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
- read64,
- try_read64,
- readq -> u64
+ pub read64_relaxed,
+ readq_relaxed -> u64
);
- define_read!(read8_relaxed, try_read8_relaxed, readb_relaxed -> u8);
- define_read!(read16_relaxed, try_read16_relaxed, readw_relaxed -> u16);
- define_read!(read32_relaxed, try_read32_relaxed, readl_relaxed -> u32);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read8_relaxed, readb_relaxed -> u8);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read16_relaxed, readw_relaxed -> u16);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read32_relaxed, readl_relaxed -> u32);
define_read!(
+ fallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
- read64_relaxed,
- try_read64_relaxed,
+ pub try_read64_relaxed,
readq_relaxed -> u64
);
- define_write!(write8, try_write8, writeb <- u8);
- define_write!(write16, try_write16, writew <- u16);
- define_write!(write32, try_write32, writel <- u32);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write8_relaxed, writeb_relaxed <- u8);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write16_relaxed, writew_relaxed <- u16);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write32_relaxed, writel_relaxed <- u32);
define_write!(
+ infallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
- write64,
- try_write64,
- writeq <- u64
+ pub write64_relaxed,
+ writeq_relaxed <- u64
);
- define_write!(write8_relaxed, try_write8_relaxed, writeb_relaxed <- u8);
- define_write!(write16_relaxed, try_write16_relaxed, writew_relaxed <- u16);
- define_write!(write32_relaxed, try_write32_relaxed, writel_relaxed <- u32);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write8_relaxed, writeb_relaxed <- u8);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write16_relaxed, writew_relaxed <- u16);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write32_relaxed, writel_relaxed <- u32);
define_write!(
+ fallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
- write64_relaxed,
- try_write64_relaxed,
+ pub try_write64_relaxed,
writeq_relaxed <- u64
);
}
diff --git a/rust/kernel/io/mem.rs b/rust/kernel/io/mem.rs
index e4878c131c6d..620022cff401 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/io/mem.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/io/mem.rs
@@ -16,8 +16,8 @@
Region,
Resource, //
},
- Io,
- IoRaw, //
+ Mmio,
+ MmioRaw, //
},
prelude::*,
};
@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ pub fn new<'a>(io_request: IoRequest<'a>) -> impl PinInit<Devres<Self>, Error> +
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for ExclusiveIoMem<SIZE> {
- type Target = Io<SIZE>;
+ type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
&self.iomem
@@ -226,10 +226,10 @@ fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
///
/// # Invariants
///
-/// [`IoMem`] always holds an [`IoRaw`] instance that holds a valid pointer to the
+/// [`IoMem`] always holds an [`MmioRaw`] instance that holds a valid pointer to the
/// start of the I/O memory mapped region.
pub struct IoMem<const SIZE: usize = 0> {
- io: IoRaw<SIZE>,
+ io: MmioRaw<SIZE>,
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoMem<SIZE> {
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ fn ioremap(resource: &Resource) -> Result<Self> {
return Err(ENOMEM);
}
- let io = IoRaw::new(addr as usize, size)?;
+ let io = MmioRaw::new(addr as usize, size)?;
let io = IoMem { io };
Ok(io)
@@ -287,10 +287,10 @@ fn drop(&mut self) {
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for IoMem<SIZE> {
- type Target = Io<SIZE>;
+ type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
// SAFETY: Safe as by the invariant of `IoMem`.
- unsafe { Io::from_raw(&self.io) }
+ unsafe { Mmio::from_raw(&self.io) }
}
}
diff --git a/rust/kernel/io/poll.rs b/rust/kernel/io/poll.rs
index b1a2570364f4..75d1b3e8596c 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/io/poll.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/io/poll.rs
@@ -45,12 +45,16 @@
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
-/// use kernel::io::{Io, poll::read_poll_timeout};
+/// use kernel::io::{
+/// Io,
+/// Mmio,
+/// poll::read_poll_timeout, //
+/// };
/// use kernel::time::Delta;
///
/// const HW_READY: u16 = 0x01;
///
-/// fn wait_for_hardware<const SIZE: usize>(io: &Io<SIZE>) -> Result {
+/// fn wait_for_hardware<const SIZE: usize>(io: &Mmio<SIZE>) -> Result {
/// read_poll_timeout(
/// // The `op` closure reads the value of a specific status register.
/// || io.try_read16(0x1000),
@@ -128,12 +132,16 @@ pub fn read_poll_timeout<Op, Cond, T>(
/// # Examples
///
/// ```no_run
-/// use kernel::io::{poll::read_poll_timeout_atomic, Io};
+/// use kernel::io::{
+/// Io,
+/// Mmio,
+/// poll::read_poll_timeout_atomic, //
+/// };
/// use kernel::time::Delta;
///
/// const HW_READY: u16 = 0x01;
///
-/// fn wait_for_hardware<const SIZE: usize>(io: &Io<SIZE>) -> Result {
+/// fn wait_for_hardware<const SIZE: usize>(io: &Mmio<SIZE>) -> Result {
/// read_poll_timeout_atomic(
/// // The `op` closure reads the value of a specific status register.
/// || io.try_read16(0x1000),
diff --git a/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs b/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
index 70e3854e7d8d..e3377397666e 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
@@ -8,8 +8,8 @@
device,
devres::Devres,
io::{
- Io,
- IoRaw, //
+ Mmio,
+ MmioRaw, //
},
prelude::*,
sync::aref::ARef, //
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
/// memory mapped PCI BAR and its size.
pub struct Bar<const SIZE: usize = 0> {
pdev: ARef<Device>,
- io: IoRaw<SIZE>,
+ io: MmioRaw<SIZE>,
num: i32,
}
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ pub(super) fn new(pdev: &Device, num: u32, name: &CStr) -> Result<Self> {
return Err(ENOMEM);
}
- let io = match IoRaw::new(ioptr, len as usize) {
+ let io = match MmioRaw::new(ioptr, len as usize) {
Ok(io) => io,
Err(err) => {
// SAFETY:
@@ -117,11 +117,11 @@ fn drop(&mut self) {
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> Deref for Bar<SIZE> {
- type Target = Io<SIZE>;
+ type Target = Mmio<SIZE>;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
// SAFETY: By the type invariant of `Self`, the MMIO range in `self.io` is properly mapped.
- unsafe { Io::from_raw(&self.io) }
+ unsafe { Mmio::from_raw(&self.io) }
}
}
diff --git a/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs b/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
index ef04c6401e6a..f7130a359768 100644
--- a/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
+++ b/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@
use kernel::{
device::Core,
devres::Devres,
+ io::Io,
+ io::IoKnownSize,
pci,
prelude::*,
sync::aref::ARef, //
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [PATCH v9 3/5] rust: io: factor out MMIO read/write macros
2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 1/5] rust: devres: style for imports Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 ` Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 4/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 5/5] sample: rust: pci: add tests for config space routines Zhi Wang
4 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang
Refactor the existing MMIO accessors to use common call macros
instead of inlining the bindings calls in each `define_{read,write}!`
expansion.
This factoring separates the common offset/bounds checks from the
low-level call pattern, making it easier to add additional I/O accessor
families.
No functional change intended.
Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
---
rust/kernel/io.rs | 149 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------
1 file changed, 104 insertions(+), 45 deletions(-)
diff --git a/rust/kernel/io.rs b/rust/kernel/io.rs
index 89d94e4fb1e3..acf8b39bd516 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/io.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/io.rs
@@ -137,8 +137,65 @@ pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct Mmio<const SIZE: usize = 0>(MmioRaw<SIZE>);
+/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C MMIO read functions.
+///
+/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level MMIO access macros (define_read) and provides
+/// a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible read semantics. It emits a direct call into the
+/// corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust return type.
+///
+/// # Parameters
+///
+/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the MMIO write.
+/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
+/// * `$ty` – The type of the value to be read.
+/// * `$addr` – The MMIO address to read.
+///
+/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
+/// abstraction invoking it.
+macro_rules! call_mmio_read {
+ (infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $type:ty, $addr:expr) => {
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
+ unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($addr as *const c_void) as $type }
+ };
+
+ (fallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $type:ty, $addr:expr) => {{
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
+ Ok(unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($addr as *const c_void) as $type })
+ }};
+}
+
+/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C MMIO write functions.
+///
+/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level MMIO access macros (define_write) and provides
+/// a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible read semantics. It emits a direct call into the
+/// corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust return type.
+///
+/// # Parameters
+///
+/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the MMIO write.
+/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
+/// * `$ty` – The type of the written value.
+/// * `$addr` – The MMIO address to write.
+/// * `$value` – The value to write.
+///
+/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
+/// abstraction invoking it.
+macro_rules! call_mmio_write {
+ (infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr, $value:expr) => {
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
+ unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($value, $addr as *mut c_void) }
+ };
+
+ (fallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr, $value:expr) => {{
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
+ unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($value, $addr as *mut c_void) };
+ Ok(())
+ }};
+}
+
macro_rules! define_read {
- (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $c_fn:ident -> $type_name:ty) => {
+ (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) ->
+ $type_name:ty) => {
/// Read IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
@@ -148,12 +205,13 @@ macro_rules! define_read {
$vis fn $name(&self, offset: usize) -> $type_name {
let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
- // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
- unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(addr as *const c_void) }
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for IO operations.
+ $call_macro!(infallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr)
}
};
- (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident -> $type_name:ty) => {
+ (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) ->
+ $type_name:ty) => {
/// Read IO data from a given offset.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
@@ -162,14 +220,16 @@ macro_rules! define_read {
$vis fn $try_name(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<$type_name> {
let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
- // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
- Ok(unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(addr as *const c_void) })
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for IO operations.
+ $call_macro!(fallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr)
}
};
}
+pub(crate) use define_read;
macro_rules! define_write {
- (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $c_fn:ident <- $type_name:ty) => {
+ (infallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) <-
+ $type_name:ty) => {
/// Write IO data from a given offset known at compile time.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on compile time, hence if the offset is not known at compile
@@ -179,12 +239,12 @@ macro_rules! define_write {
$vis fn $name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) {
let addr = self.io_addr_assert::<$type_name>(offset);
- // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
- unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(value, addr as *mut c_void) }
+ $call_macro!(infallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr, value);
}
};
- (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $c_fn:ident <- $type_name:ty) => {
+ (fallible, $(#[$attr:meta])* $vis:vis $try_name:ident, $call_macro:ident($c_fn:ident) <-
+ $type_name:ty) => {
/// Write IO data from a given offset.
///
/// Bound checks are performed on runtime, it fails if the offset (plus the type size) is
@@ -193,12 +253,11 @@ macro_rules! define_write {
$vis fn $try_name(&self, value: $type_name, offset: usize) -> Result {
let addr = self.io_addr::<$type_name>(offset)?;
- // SAFETY: By the type invariant `addr` is a valid address for MMIO operations.
- unsafe { bindings::$c_fn(value, addr as *mut c_void) }
- Ok(())
+ $call_macro!(fallible, $c_fn, self, $type_name, addr, value)
}
};
}
+pub(crate) use define_write;
/// Checks whether an access of type `U` at the given `offset`
/// is valid within this region.
@@ -352,37 +411,37 @@ fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize for Mmio<SIZE> {
- define_read!(infallible, read8, readb -> u8);
- define_read!(infallible, read16, readw -> u16);
- define_read!(infallible, read32, readl -> u32);
+ define_read!(infallible, read8, call_mmio_read(readb) -> u8);
+ define_read!(infallible, read16, call_mmio_read(readw) -> u16);
+ define_read!(infallible, read32, call_mmio_read(readl) -> u32);
- define_write!(infallible, write8, writeb <- u8);
- define_write!(infallible, write16, writew <- u16);
- define_write!(infallible, write32, writel <- u32);
+ define_write!(infallible, write8, call_mmio_write(writeb) <- u8);
+ define_write!(infallible, write16, call_mmio_write(writew) <- u16);
+ define_write!(infallible, write32, call_mmio_write(writel) <- u32);
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> Io for Mmio<SIZE> {
- define_read!(fallible, try_read8, readb -> u8);
- define_read!(fallible, try_read16, readw -> u16);
- define_read!(fallible, try_read32, readl -> u32);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read8, call_mmio_read(readb) -> u8);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read16, call_mmio_read(readw) -> u16);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read32, call_mmio_read(readl) -> u32);
- define_write!(fallible, try_write8, writeb <- u8);
- define_write!(fallible, try_write16, writew <- u16);
- define_write!(fallible, try_write32, writel <- u32);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write8, call_mmio_write(writeb) <- u8);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write16, call_mmio_write(writew) <- u16);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write32, call_mmio_write(writel) <- u32);
}
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
impl<const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize64 for Mmio<SIZE> {
- define_read!(infallible, read64, readq -> u64);
+ define_read!(infallible, read64, call_mmio_read(readq) -> u64);
- define_write!(infallible, write64, writeq <- u64);
+ define_write!(infallible, write64, call_mmio_write(writeq) <- u64);
}
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
impl<const SIZE: usize> Io64 for Mmio<SIZE> {
- define_read!(fallible, try_read64, readq -> u64);
+ define_read!(fallible, try_read64, call_mmio_read(readq) -> u64);
- define_write!(fallible, try_write64, writeq <- u64);
+ define_write!(fallible, try_write64, call_mmio_write(writeq) <- u64);
}
impl<const SIZE: usize> Mmio<SIZE> {
@@ -397,43 +456,43 @@ pub unsafe fn from_raw(raw: &MmioRaw<SIZE>) -> &Self {
unsafe { &*core::ptr::from_ref(raw).cast() }
}
- define_read!(infallible, pub read8_relaxed, readb_relaxed -> u8);
- define_read!(infallible, pub read16_relaxed, readw_relaxed -> u16);
- define_read!(infallible, pub read32_relaxed, readl_relaxed -> u32);
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read8_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readb_relaxed) -> u8);
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read16_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readw_relaxed) -> u16);
+ define_read!(infallible, pub read32_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readl_relaxed) -> u32);
define_read!(
infallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
pub read64_relaxed,
- readq_relaxed -> u64
+ call_mmio_read(readq_relaxed) -> u64
);
- define_read!(fallible, pub try_read8_relaxed, readb_relaxed -> u8);
- define_read!(fallible, pub try_read16_relaxed, readw_relaxed -> u16);
- define_read!(fallible, pub try_read32_relaxed, readl_relaxed -> u32);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read8_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readb_relaxed) -> u8);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read16_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readw_relaxed) -> u16);
+ define_read!(fallible, pub try_read32_relaxed, call_mmio_read(readl_relaxed) -> u32);
define_read!(
fallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
pub try_read64_relaxed,
- readq_relaxed -> u64
+ call_mmio_read(readq_relaxed) -> u64
);
- define_write!(infallible, pub write8_relaxed, writeb_relaxed <- u8);
- define_write!(infallible, pub write16_relaxed, writew_relaxed <- u16);
- define_write!(infallible, pub write32_relaxed, writel_relaxed <- u32);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write8_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writeb_relaxed) <- u8);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write16_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writew_relaxed) <- u16);
+ define_write!(infallible, pub write32_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writel_relaxed) <- u32);
define_write!(
infallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
pub write64_relaxed,
- writeq_relaxed <- u64
+ call_mmio_write(writeq_relaxed) <- u64
);
- define_write!(fallible, pub try_write8_relaxed, writeb_relaxed <- u8);
- define_write!(fallible, pub try_write16_relaxed, writew_relaxed <- u16);
- define_write!(fallible, pub try_write32_relaxed, writel_relaxed <- u32);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write8_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writeb_relaxed) <- u8);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write16_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writew_relaxed) <- u16);
+ define_write!(fallible, pub try_write32_relaxed, call_mmio_write(writel_relaxed) <- u32);
define_write!(
fallible,
#[cfg(CONFIG_64BIT)]
pub try_write64_relaxed,
- writeq_relaxed <- u64
+ call_mmio_write(writeq_relaxed) <- u64
);
}
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [PATCH v9 4/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support
2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 3/5] rust: io: factor out MMIO read/write macros Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 ` Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 5/5] sample: rust: pci: add tests for config space routines Zhi Wang
4 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang
Drivers might need to access PCI config space for querying capability
structures and access the registers inside the structures.
For Rust drivers need to access PCI config space, the Rust PCI abstraction
needs to support it in a way that upholds Rust's safety principles.
Introduce a `ConfigSpace` wrapper in Rust PCI abstraction to provide safe
accessors for PCI config space. The new type implements the `Io` trait to
share offset validation and bound-checking logic with others.
Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
Cc: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
Cc: Joel Fernandes <joelagnelf@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
---
rust/kernel/pci/io.rs | 151 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 151 insertions(+)
diff --git a/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs b/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
index e3377397666e..33495d063af3 100644
--- a/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
+++ b/rust/kernel/pci/io.rs
@@ -8,6 +8,10 @@
device,
devres::Devres,
io::{
+ define_read,
+ define_write,
+ IoBase,
+ IoKnownSize,
Mmio,
MmioRaw, //
},
@@ -16,6 +20,125 @@
};
use core::ops::Deref;
+/// Represents the size of a PCI configuration space.
+///
+/// PCI devices can have either a *normal* (legacy) configuration space of 256 bytes,
+/// or an *extended* configuration space of 4096 bytes as defined in the PCI Express
+/// specification.
+#[repr(usize)]
+pub(super) enum ConfigSpaceSize {
+ /// 256-byte legacy PCI configuration space.
+ Normal = 256,
+
+ /// 4096-byte PCIe extended configuration space.
+ Extended = 4096,
+}
+
+impl ConfigSpaceSize {
+ /// Get the raw value of this enum.
+ #[inline(always)]
+ pub(super) const fn as_raw(self) -> usize {
+ // CAST: PCI configuration space size is at most 4096 bytes, so the value always fits
+ // within `usize` without truncation or sign change.
+ self as usize
+ }
+}
+
+/// The PCI configuration space of a device.
+///
+/// Provides typed read and write accessors for configuration registers
+/// using the standard `pci_read_config_*` and `pci_write_config_*` helpers.
+///
+/// The generic const parameter `SIZE` can be used to indicate the
+/// maximum size of the configuration space (e.g. `ConfigSpaceSize::Normal`
+/// or `ConfigSpaceSize::Extended`).
+pub struct ConfigSpace<'a, const SIZE: usize = { ConfigSpaceSize::Extended as usize }> {
+ pub(crate) pdev: &'a Device<device::Bound>,
+}
+
+/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C PCI configuration space read functions.
+///
+/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level PCI configuration space access macros
+/// (define_read) and provides a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible read semantics. It
+/// emits a direct call into the corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust
+/// return type.
+///
+/// # Parameters
+///
+/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the PCI configuration space write.
+/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
+/// * `$ty` – The type of the value to read.
+/// * `$addr` – The PCI configuration space offset to read.
+///
+/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
+/// abstraction invoking it.
+macro_rules! call_config_read {
+ (infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr) => {{
+ let mut val: $ty = 0;
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `$self.pdev` is a valid address.
+ // CAST: The offset is cast to `i32` because the C functions expect a 32-bit signed offset
+ // parameter. PCI configuration space size is at most 4096 bytes, so the value always fits
+ // within `i32` without truncation or sign change.
+ // Return value from C function is ignored in infallible accessors.
+ let _ret = unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($self.pdev.as_raw(), $addr as i32, &mut val) };
+ val
+ }};
+}
+
+/// Internal helper macros used to invoke C PCI configuration space write functions.
+///
+/// This macro is intended to be used by higher-level PCI configuration space access macros
+/// (define_write) and provides a unified expansion for infallible vs. fallible read semantics. It
+/// emits a direct call into the corresponding C helper and performs the required cast to the Rust
+/// return type.
+///
+/// # Parameters
+///
+/// * `$c_fn` – The C function performing the PCI configuration space write.
+/// * `$self` – The I/O backend object.
+/// * `$ty` – The type of the written value.
+/// * `$addr` – The configuration space offset to write.
+/// * `$value` – The value to write.
+///
+/// This macro does not perform any validation; all invariants must be upheld by the higher-level
+/// abstraction invoking it.
+macro_rules! call_config_write {
+ (infallible, $c_fn:ident, $self:ident, $ty:ty, $addr:expr, $value:expr) => {
+ // SAFETY: By the type invariant `$self.pdev` is a valid address.
+ // CAST: The offset is cast to `i32` because the C functions expect a 32-bit signed offset
+ // parameter. PCI configuration space size is at most 4096 bytes, so the value always fits
+ // within `i32` without truncation or sign change.
+ // Return value from C function is ignored in infallible accessors.
+ let _ret = unsafe { bindings::$c_fn($self.pdev.as_raw(), $addr as i32, $value) };
+ };
+}
+
+impl<'a, const SIZE: usize> IoBase for ConfigSpace<'a, SIZE> {
+ const MIN_SIZE: usize = SIZE;
+
+ /// Returns the base address of the I/O region. It is always 0 for configuration space.
+ #[inline]
+ fn addr(&self) -> usize {
+ 0
+ }
+
+ /// Returns the maximum size of the configuration space.
+ #[inline]
+ fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
+ self.pdev.cfg_size().map_or(0, |v| v as usize)
+ }
+}
+
+impl<'a, const SIZE: usize> IoKnownSize for ConfigSpace<'a, SIZE> {
+ define_read!(infallible, read8, call_config_read(pci_read_config_byte) -> u8);
+ define_read!(infallible, read16, call_config_read(pci_read_config_word) -> u16);
+ define_read!(infallible, read32, call_config_read(pci_read_config_dword) -> u32);
+
+ define_write!(infallible, write8, call_config_write(pci_write_config_byte) <- u8);
+ define_write!(infallible, write16, call_config_write(pci_write_config_word) <- u16);
+ define_write!(infallible, write32, call_config_write(pci_write_config_dword) <- u32);
+}
+
/// A PCI BAR to perform I/O-Operations on.
///
/// I/O backend assumes that the device is little-endian and will automatically
@@ -144,4 +267,32 @@ pub fn iomap_region<'a>(
) -> impl PinInit<Devres<Bar>, Error> + 'a {
self.iomap_region_sized::<0>(bar, name)
}
+
+ /// Returns the size of configuration space.
+ fn cfg_size(&self) -> Result<ConfigSpaceSize> {
+ // SAFETY: `self.as_raw` is a valid pointer to a `struct pci_dev`.
+ let size = unsafe { (*self.as_raw()).cfg_size };
+ match size {
+ 256 => Ok(ConfigSpaceSize::Normal),
+ 4096 => Ok(ConfigSpaceSize::Extended),
+ _ => {
+ debug_assert!(false);
+ Err(EINVAL)
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ /// Return an initialized config space object.
+ pub fn config_space<'a>(
+ &'a self,
+ ) -> Result<ConfigSpace<'a, { ConfigSpaceSize::Normal.as_raw() }>> {
+ Ok(ConfigSpace { pdev: self })
+ }
+
+ /// Return an initialized config space object.
+ pub fn config_space_extended<'a>(
+ &'a self,
+ ) -> Result<ConfigSpace<'a, { ConfigSpaceSize::Extended.as_raw() }>> {
+ Ok(ConfigSpace { pdev: self })
+ }
}
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [PATCH v9 5/5] sample: rust: pci: add tests for config space routines
2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
` (3 preceding siblings ...)
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 4/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-15 21:26 ` Zhi Wang
4 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-15 21:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross,
markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede,
targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida,
Zhi Wang
Add tests exercising the PCI configuration space helpers.
Suggested-by: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
---
samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 28 insertions(+)
diff --git a/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs b/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
index f7130a359768..c5f4c6fc7cc0 100644
--- a/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
+++ b/samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs
@@ -5,6 +5,7 @@
//! To make this driver probe, QEMU must be run with `-device pci-testdev`.
use kernel::{
+ device::Bound,
device::Core,
devres::Devres,
io::Io,
@@ -66,6 +67,32 @@ fn testdev(index: &TestIndex, bar: &Bar0) -> Result<u32> {
Ok(bar.read32(Regs::COUNT))
}
+
+ fn config_space(pdev: &pci::Device<Bound>) -> Result {
+ let config = pdev.config_space()?;
+
+ // TODO: use the register!() macro for defining PCI configuration space registers once it
+ // has been move out of nova-core.
+ dev_info!(
+ pdev.as_ref(),
+ "pci-testdev config space read8 rev ID: {:x}\n",
+ config.read8(0x8)
+ );
+
+ dev_info!(
+ pdev.as_ref(),
+ "pci-testdev config space read16 vendor ID: {:x}\n",
+ config.read16(0)
+ );
+
+ dev_info!(
+ pdev.as_ref(),
+ "pci-testdev config space read32 BAR 0: {:x}\n",
+ config.read32(0x10)
+ );
+
+ Ok(())
+ }
}
impl pci::Driver for SampleDriver {
@@ -97,6 +124,7 @@ fn probe(pdev: &pci::Device<Core>, info: &Self::IdInfo) -> impl PinInit<Self, Er
"pci-testdev data-match count: {}\n",
Self::testdev(info, bar)?
);
+ Self::config_space(pdev)?;
},
pdev: pdev.into(),
}))
--
2.51.0
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait Zhi Wang
@ 2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
2026-01-16 13:23 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-16 15:23 ` Gary Guo
2026-01-16 13:57 ` Markus Probst
1 sibling, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Alice Ryhl @ 2026-01-16 10:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Zhi Wang
Cc: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel, dakr, bhelgaas,
kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra,
ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf,
jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida
On Thu, Jan 15, 2026 at 11:26:46PM +0200, Zhi Wang wrote:
> The previous Io<SIZE> type combined both the generic I/O access helpers
> and MMIO implementation details in a single struct.
>
> To establish a cleaner layering between the I/O interface and its concrete
> backends, paving the way for supporting additional I/O mechanisms in the
> future, Io<SIZE> need to be factored.
>
> Factor the common helpers into new {Io, Io64} traits, and move the
> MMIO-specific logic into a dedicated Mmio<SIZE> type implementing that
> trait. Rename the IoRaw to MmioRaw and update the bus MMIO implementations
> to use MmioRaw.
>
> No functional change intended.
>
> Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
> Cc: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
> Cc: Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@kernel.org>
> Cc: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
> Cc: John Hubbard <jhubbard@nvidia.com>
> Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
> +pub trait IoBase {
> +pub trait IoKnownSize: IoBase {
> +pub trait Io: IoBase {
> +pub trait IoKnownSize64: IoKnownSize {
> +pub trait Io64: Io {
The following combinations are possible:
1. IoBase
2. IoBase + Io
3. IoBase + IoKnownSize
4. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize
5. IoBase + Io + Io64
6. IoBase + Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
7. IoBase + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
8. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
9. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + Io64 + IoKnownSize64
I'm not sure all of them make sense. I can't see a scenario where I
would pick 1, 3, 6, 7, or 8.
How about this trait hierachy? I believe I suggested something along
these lines before.
pub trait Io {
pub trait Io64: Io {
pub trait IoKnownSize: Io {
With these traits, these scenarios are possible:
1. Io
2. Io + Io64
3. Io + IoKnownSize
4. Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
which seems to be the actual set of cases we care about.
Note that IoKnownSize can have methods that only apply when Io64 is
implemented:
trait IoKnownSize: Io {
/// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8;
/// Infallible 64-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64
where
Self: Io64;
}
Alice
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
@ 2026-01-16 13:23 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-16 15:23 ` Gary Guo
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Danilo Krummrich @ 2026-01-16 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alice Ryhl
Cc: Zhi Wang, rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel, bhelgaas,
kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra,
ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf,
jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida
On Fri Jan 16, 2026 at 11:44 AM CET, Alice Ryhl wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 15, 2026 at 11:26:46PM +0200, Zhi Wang wrote:
>> +pub trait IoBase {
>> +pub trait IoKnownSize: IoBase {
>> +pub trait Io: IoBase {
>> +pub trait IoKnownSize64: IoKnownSize {
>> +pub trait Io64: Io {
>
> The following combinations are possible:
>
> 1. IoBase
> 2. IoBase + Io
> 3. IoBase + IoKnownSize
> 4. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize
> 5. IoBase + Io + Io64
> 6. IoBase + Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
> 7. IoBase + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
> 8. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
> 9. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + Io64 + IoKnownSize64
>
> I'm not sure all of them make sense. I can't see a scenario where I
> would pick 1, 3, 6, 7, or 8.
I think for the PCI configuration space backend we can get away with 3
(which implies that the others have to exist as well).
However - and I think I already mentioned this in previous reply a while ago - I
am not insisting to make this split for this reason, as it is an exception
rather than the rule.
However, note that the only really odd one is 1. All other ones could exist when
there is simply no user for certain accessors, i.e. they would be dead code.
Having that said, I think both have rather minor advantages and disadvantes, so
I'm fine with either. If you feel strongly about this, let's go with your
proposal below.
> How about this trait hierachy? I believe I suggested something along
> these lines before.
>
> pub trait Io {
> pub trait Io64: Io {
> pub trait IoKnownSize: Io {
>
> With these traits, these scenarios are possible:
>
> 1. Io
> 2. Io + Io64
> 3. Io + IoKnownSize
> 4. Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
>
> which seems to be the actual set of cases we care about.
>
> Note that IoKnownSize can have methods that only apply when Io64 is
> implemented:
>
> trait IoKnownSize: Io {
> /// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8;
>
> /// Infallible 64-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64
> where
> Self: Io64;
> }
>
> Alice
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait Zhi Wang
2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
@ 2026-01-16 13:57 ` Markus Probst
2026-01-16 14:44 ` Danilo Krummrich
1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Markus Probst @ 2026-01-16 13:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Zhi Wang, rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel
Cc: dakr, aliceryhl, bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor,
boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh, lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, helgaas,
cjia, smitra, ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot,
joelagnelf, jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6771 bytes --]
On Thu, 2026-01-15 at 23:26 +0200, Zhi Wang wrote:
> The previous Io<SIZE> type combined both the generic I/O access helpers
> and MMIO implementation details in a single struct.
>
> To establish a cleaner layering between the I/O interface and its concrete
> backends, paving the way for supporting additional I/O mechanisms in the
> future, Io<SIZE> need to be factored.
>
> Factor the common helpers into new {Io, Io64} traits, and move the
> MMIO-specific logic into a dedicated Mmio<SIZE> type implementing that
> trait. Rename the IoRaw to MmioRaw and update the bus MMIO implementations
> to use MmioRaw.
>
> No functional change intended.
>
> Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
> Cc: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
> Cc: Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@kernel.org>
> Cc: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
> Cc: John Hubbard <jhubbard@nvidia.com>
> Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
> ---
> drivers/gpu/drm/tyr/regs.rs | 1 +
> drivers/gpu/nova-core/gsp/sequencer.rs | 5 +-
> drivers/gpu/nova-core/regs/macros.rs | 90 +++++---
> drivers/gpu/nova-core/vbios.rs | 1 +
> rust/kernel/devres.rs | 14 +-
> rust/kernel/io.rs | 291 +++++++++++++++++++------
> rust/kernel/io/mem.rs | 16 +-
> rust/kernel/io/poll.rs | 16 +-
> rust/kernel/pci/io.rs | 12 +-
> samples/rust/rust_driver_pci.rs | 2 +
> 10 files changed, 317 insertions(+), 131 deletions(-)
>
> +/// Represents a region of I/O space of a fixed size.
> +///
> +/// This is an abstract representation to be implemented by arbitrary I/O
> +/// backends (e.g. MMIO, I2C, etc.).
> +///
> +/// Provides common helpers for offset validation and address
> +/// calculation on top of a base address and maximum size.
> +pub trait IoBase {
> + /// Minimum usable size of this region.
> + const MIN_SIZE: usize;
>
> /// Returns the base address of this mapping.
> - #[inline]
> - pub fn addr(&self) -> usize {
> - self.0.addr()
> - }
> + fn addr(&self) -> usize;
>
> /// Returns the maximum size of this mapping.
> - #[inline]
> - pub fn maxsize(&self) -> usize {
> - self.0.maxsize()
> - }
> -
> - #[inline]
> - const fn offset_valid<U>(offset: usize, size: usize) -> bool {
> - let type_size = core::mem::size_of::<U>();
> - if let Some(end) = offset.checked_add(type_size) {
> - end <= size && offset % type_size == 0
> - } else {
> - false
> - }
> - }
> + fn maxsize(&self) -> usize;
>
> + /// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
> + /// performing runtime bound checks.
> #[inline]
> fn io_addr<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<usize> {
> - if !Self::offset_valid::<U>(offset, self.maxsize()) {
> + if !offset_valid::<U>(offset, self.maxsize()) {
> return Err(EINVAL);
> }
>
> @@ -239,50 +242,198 @@ fn io_addr<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<usize> {
> self.addr().checked_add(offset).ok_or(EINVAL)
> }
>
> + /// Returns the absolute I/O address for a given `offset`,
> + /// performing compile-time bound checks.
> #[inline]
> fn io_addr_assert<U>(&self, offset: usize) -> usize {
> - build_assert!(Self::offset_valid::<U>(offset, SIZE));
> + build_assert!(offset_valid::<U>(offset, Self::MIN_SIZE));
>
> self.addr() + offset
> }
> +}
> +
> +/// Types implementing this trait (e.g. MMIO BARs or PCI config regions)
> +/// can share the same IoKnownSize accessors.
> +///
> +/// In this context, "known size" represents the static guarantee regarding
> +/// the minimum accessible size requested from the I/O backend.
> +///
> +/// Note that the actual size of the resource provided by the hardware
> +/// (e.g., the physical BAR size) might be larger than this "known size".
> +pub trait IoKnownSize: IoBase {
> + /// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8;
> +
> + /// Infallible 16-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn read16(&self, offset: usize) -> u16;
> +
> + /// Infallible 32-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn read32(&self, offset: usize) -> u32;
> +
> + /// Infallible 8-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn write8(&self, value: u8, offset: usize);
> +
> + /// Infallible 16-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn write16(&self, value: u16, offset: usize);
>
> - define_read!(read8, try_read8, readb -> u8);
> - define_read!(read16, try_read16, readw -> u16);
> - define_read!(read32, try_read32, readl -> u32);
> + /// Infallible 32-bit write with compile-time bounds check.
> + fn write32(&self, value: u32, offset: usize);
> +}
> +
> +/// Types implementing this trait (e.g. MMIO BARs or PCI config regions)
> +/// can share the same Io accessors.
> +///
> +/// This trait defines the accessors for performing runtime-checked
> +/// operations on an I/O region. Note that due to the runtime checks, these
> +/// operations may be more expensive than those provided by
> +/// [`IoKnownSize`].
> +///
> +/// Implement this trait when:
> +/// - The I/O backend cannot guarantee a minimum accessible size for the
> +/// region.
> +/// - The I/O backend wishes to return meaningful error codes when the
> +/// driver accesses the region.
> +pub trait Io: IoBase {
> + /// Fallible 8-bit read with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_read8(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u8>;
> +
> + /// Fallible 16-bit read with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_read16(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u16>;
> +
> + /// Fallible 32-bit read with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_read32(&self, offset: usize) -> Result<u32>;
> +
> + /// Fallible 8-bit write with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_write8(&self, value: u8, offset: usize) -> Result;
> +
> + /// Fallible 16-bit write with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_write16(&self, value: u16, offset: usize) -> Result;
> +
> + /// Fallible 32-bit write with runtime bounds check.
> + fn try_write32(&self, value: u32, offset: usize) -> Result;
How would this work with I2C as a IO backend?
I2C by itself doesn't have 32-bit IO, which the trait requires.
There is
"byte data" - 8 bit
"word data" - 16 bit
"block data" - arbitrary number of bytes (in SMBus limited to 32 bytes.
Outside of SMBus it could be higher)
Note that I only require "byte data" for my led driver.
Thanks
- Markus Probst
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-16 13:57 ` Markus Probst
@ 2026-01-16 14:44 ` Danilo Krummrich
0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Danilo Krummrich @ 2026-01-16 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Markus Probst, aliceryhl
Cc: Zhi Wang, rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel, bhelgaas,
kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, helgaas, cjia, smitra, ankita,
aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf, jhubbard,
zhiwang, daniel.almeida
On Fri Jan 16, 2026 at 2:57 PM CET, Markus Probst wrote:
> On Thu, 2026-01-15 at 23:26 +0200, Zhi Wang wrote:
> How would this work with I2C as a IO backend?
>
> I2C by itself doesn't have 32-bit IO, which the trait requires.
>
> There is
> "byte data" - 8 bit
> "word data" - 16 bit
> "block data" - arbitrary number of bytes (in SMBus limited to 32 bytes.
> Outside of SMBus it could be higher)
You can use a block data transfer to implement 32bit.
> Note that I only require "byte data" for my led driver.
That's fine, not ever driver has to make use of all capabilities.
However, eventually we want to be able to use regmap to implement I/O backends.
For this it could actually become necessary to have separate traits for 8, 16
and 32 bit. But I think this is out of scope for this series, let's leave that
to a subsequent series. We can always split them up when necessary.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
2026-01-16 13:23 ` Danilo Krummrich
@ 2026-01-16 15:23 ` Gary Guo
2026-01-16 15:27 ` Danilo Krummrich
1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Gary Guo @ 2026-01-16 15:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Alice Ryhl, Zhi Wang
Cc: rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel, dakr, bhelgaas,
kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, gary, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra,
ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf,
jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida
On Fri Jan 16, 2026 at 10:44 AM GMT, Alice Ryhl wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 15, 2026 at 11:26:46PM +0200, Zhi Wang wrote:
>> The previous Io<SIZE> type combined both the generic I/O access helpers
>> and MMIO implementation details in a single struct.
>>
>> To establish a cleaner layering between the I/O interface and its concrete
>> backends, paving the way for supporting additional I/O mechanisms in the
>> future, Io<SIZE> need to be factored.
>>
>> Factor the common helpers into new {Io, Io64} traits, and move the
>> MMIO-specific logic into a dedicated Mmio<SIZE> type implementing that
>> trait. Rename the IoRaw to MmioRaw and update the bus MMIO implementations
>> to use MmioRaw.
>>
>> No functional change intended.
>>
>> Cc: Alexandre Courbot <acourbot@nvidia.com>
>> Cc: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
>> Cc: Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas@kernel.org>
>> Cc: Danilo Krummrich <dakr@kernel.org>
>> Cc: John Hubbard <jhubbard@nvidia.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Zhi Wang <zhiw@nvidia.com>
>
>> +pub trait IoBase {
>> +pub trait IoKnownSize: IoBase {
>> +pub trait Io: IoBase {
>> +pub trait IoKnownSize64: IoKnownSize {
>> +pub trait Io64: Io {
>
> The following combinations are possible:
>
> 1. IoBase
> 2. IoBase + Io
> 3. IoBase + IoKnownSize
> 4. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize
> 5. IoBase + Io + Io64
> 6. IoBase + Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
> 7. IoBase + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
> 8. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + IoKnownSize64
> 9. IoBase + Io + IoKnownSize + Io64 + IoKnownSize64
>
> I'm not sure all of them make sense. I can't see a scenario where I
> would pick 1, 3, 6, 7, or 8.
>
> How about this trait hierachy? I believe I suggested something along
> these lines before.
>
> pub trait Io {
> pub trait Io64: Io {
> pub trait IoKnownSize: Io {
>
> With these traits, these scenarios are possible:
>
> 1. Io
> 2. Io + Io64
> 3. Io + IoKnownSize
> 4. Io + Io64 + IoKnownSize
>
> which seems to be the actual set of cases we care about.
>
> Note that IoKnownSize can have methods that only apply when Io64 is
> implemented:
>
> trait IoKnownSize: Io {
> /// Infallible 8-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8;
>
> /// Infallible 64-bit read with compile-time bounds check.
> fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64
> where
> Self: Io64;
> }
I like this.
I wonder if we can keep all methods on `Io` trait. And then have marker trait to
represent capability on performing Io access.
Something like:
trait IoCapable<T> {}
trait Io {
fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8 where Self: IoCapable<u8>;
fn read16(&self, offset: usize) -> u16 where Self: IoCapable<u16>;
fn read32(&self, offset: usize) -> u32 where Self: IoCapable<u32>;
fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64 where Self: IoCapable<u64>;
}
Then you have a single (non-marker) trait and not a hierachy of them.
Best,
Gary
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-16 15:23 ` Gary Guo
@ 2026-01-16 15:27 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-17 8:27 ` Zhi Wang
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Danilo Krummrich @ 2026-01-16 15:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gary Guo
Cc: Alice Ryhl, Zhi Wang, rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel,
bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra,
ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf,
jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida, markus.probst
(Cc: Markus)
On Fri Jan 16, 2026 at 4:23 PM CET, Gary Guo wrote:
> I wonder if we can keep all methods on `Io` trait. And then have marker trait to
> represent capability on performing Io access.
>
> Something like:
>
> trait IoCapable<T> {}
>
> trait Io {
> fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8 where Self: IoCapable<u8>;
> fn read16(&self, offset: usize) -> u16 where Self: IoCapable<u16>;
> fn read32(&self, offset: usize) -> u32 where Self: IoCapable<u32>;
> fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64 where Self: IoCapable<u64>;
> }
>
> Then you have a single (non-marker) trait and not a hierachy of them.
I think that is a great idea. I think it will also help with supporting I/O
backends based on regmap.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait
2026-01-16 15:27 ` Danilo Krummrich
@ 2026-01-17 8:27 ` Zhi Wang
0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Zhi Wang @ 2026-01-17 8:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Danilo Krummrich
Cc: Gary Guo, Alice Ryhl, rust-for-linux, linux-pci, linux-kernel,
bhelgaas, kwilczynski, ojeda, alex.gaynor, boqun.feng, bjorn3_gh,
lossin, a.hindborg, tmgross, markus.probst, helgaas, cjia, smitra,
ankita, aniketa, kwankhede, targupta, acourbot, joelagnelf,
jhubbard, zhiwang, daniel.almeida
On Fri, 16 Jan 2026 16:27:27 +0100
"Danilo Krummrich" <dakr@kernel.org> wrote:
> (Cc: Markus)
>
> On Fri Jan 16, 2026 at 4:23 PM CET, Gary Guo wrote:
> > I wonder if we can keep all methods on `Io` trait. And then have
> > marker trait to represent capability on performing Io access.
> >
> > Something like:
> >
> > trait IoCapable<T> {}
> >
> > trait Io {
> > fn read8(&self, offset: usize) -> u8 where Self: IoCapable<u8>;
> > fn read16(&self, offset: usize) -> u16 where Self:
> > IoCapable<u16>; fn read32(&self, offset: usize) -> u32 where Self:
> > IoCapable<u32>; fn read64(&self, offset: usize) -> u64 where Self:
> > IoCapable<u64>; }
> >
> > Then you have a single (non-marker) trait and not a hierachy of
> > them.
>
> I think that is a great idea. I think it will also help with
> supporting I/O backends based on regmap.
Agreed. The IoCapable<T> marker trait approach is much cleaner and
solves the hierarchy complexity Alice pointed out.
I'll pick this up for v10. Thanks!
Z.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2026-01-17 8:27 UTC | newest]
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2026-01-15 21:26 [PATCH v9 0/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 1/5] rust: devres: style for imports Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 2/5] rust: io: factor common I/O helpers into Io trait Zhi Wang
2026-01-16 10:44 ` Alice Ryhl
2026-01-16 13:23 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-16 15:23 ` Gary Guo
2026-01-16 15:27 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-17 8:27 ` Zhi Wang
2026-01-16 13:57 ` Markus Probst
2026-01-16 14:44 ` Danilo Krummrich
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 3/5] rust: io: factor out MMIO read/write macros Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 4/5] rust: pci: add config space read/write support Zhi Wang
2026-01-15 21:26 ` [PATCH v9 5/5] sample: rust: pci: add tests for config space routines Zhi Wang
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