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rust: list: add cursor
The cursor is very similar to the list iterator, but it has one important feature that the iterator doesn't: it can be used to remove items from the linked list. This feature cannot be added to the iterator because the references you get from the iterator are considered borrows of the original list, rather than borrows of the iterator. This means that there's no way to prevent code like this: let item = iter.next(); iter.remove(); use(item); If `iter` was a cursor instead of an iterator, then `item` will be considered a borrow of `iter`. Since `remove` destroys `iter`, this means that the borrow-checker will prevent uses of `item` after the call to `remove`. So there is a trade-off between supporting use in traditional for loops, and supporting removal of elements as you iterate. Iterators and cursors represents two different choices on that spectrum. Rust Binder needs cursors for the list of death notifications that a process is currently handling. When userspace tells Binder that it has finished processing the death notification, Binder will iterate the list to search for the relevant item and remove it. Reviewed-by: Benno Lossin <benno.lossin@proton.me> Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240814-linked-list-v5-8-f5f5e8075da0@google.com Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
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@ -440,6 +440,20 @@ impl<T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64> List<T, ID> {
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other.first = ptr::null_mut();
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}
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/// Returns a cursor to the first element of the list.
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///
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/// If the list is empty, this returns `None`.
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pub fn cursor_front(&mut self) -> Option<Cursor<'_, T, ID>> {
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if self.first.is_null() {
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None
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} else {
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Some(Cursor {
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current: self.first,
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list: self,
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})
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}
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}
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/// Creates an iterator over the list.
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pub fn iter(&self) -> Iter<'_, T, ID> {
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// INVARIANT: If the list is empty, both pointers are null. Otherwise, both pointers point
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@ -514,6 +528,74 @@ impl<'a, T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64> Iterator for Iter<'a, T, ID> {
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}
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}
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/// A cursor into a [`List`].
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///
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/// # Invariants
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///
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/// The `current` pointer points a value in `list`.
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pub struct Cursor<'a, T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64 = 0> {
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current: *mut ListLinksFields,
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list: &'a mut List<T, ID>,
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}
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impl<'a, T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64> Cursor<'a, T, ID> {
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/// Access the current element of this cursor.
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pub fn current(&self) -> ArcBorrow<'_, T> {
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// SAFETY: The `current` pointer points a value in the list.
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let me = unsafe { T::view_value(ListLinks::from_fields(self.current)) };
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// SAFETY:
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// * All values in a list are stored in an `Arc`.
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// * The value cannot be removed from the list for the duration of the lifetime annotated
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// on the returned `ArcBorrow`, because removing it from the list would require mutable
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// access to the cursor or the list. However, the `ArcBorrow` holds an immutable borrow
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// on the cursor, which in turn holds a mutable borrow on the list, so any such
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// mutable access requires first releasing the immutable borrow on the cursor.
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// * Values in a list never have a `UniqueArc` reference, because the list has a `ListArc`
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// reference, and `UniqueArc` references must be unique.
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unsafe { ArcBorrow::from_raw(me) }
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}
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/// Move the cursor to the next element.
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pub fn next(self) -> Option<Cursor<'a, T, ID>> {
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// SAFETY: The `current` field is always in a list.
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let next = unsafe { (*self.current).next };
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if next == self.list.first {
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None
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} else {
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// INVARIANT: Since `self.current` is in the `list`, its `next` pointer is also in the
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// `list`.
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Some(Cursor {
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current: next,
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list: self.list,
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})
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}
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}
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/// Move the cursor to the previous element.
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pub fn prev(self) -> Option<Cursor<'a, T, ID>> {
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// SAFETY: The `current` field is always in a list.
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let prev = unsafe { (*self.current).prev };
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if self.current == self.list.first {
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None
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} else {
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// INVARIANT: Since `self.current` is in the `list`, its `prev` pointer is also in the
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// `list`.
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Some(Cursor {
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current: prev,
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list: self.list,
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})
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}
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}
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/// Remove the current element from the list.
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pub fn remove(self) -> ListArc<T, ID> {
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// SAFETY: The `current` pointer always points at a member of the list.
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unsafe { self.list.remove_internal(self.current) }
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}
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}
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impl<'a, T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64> FusedIterator for Iter<'a, T, ID> {}
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impl<'a, T: ?Sized + ListItem<ID>, const ID: u64> IntoIterator for &'a List<T, ID> {
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