diff options
author | Andreas Hindborg <a.hindborg@kernel.org> | 2025-09-02 11:54:59 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> | 2025-09-02 05:23:56 -0600 |
commit | b1dae0be89278348e2c99ddca820d91292856b10 (patch) | |
tree | 76183f953a3dce4af61fc481a8640da7442ba7a8 /rust/kernel/str.rs | |
parent | cdde7a1951ff0600adc45718ba251559e4d3fd7c (diff) |
rust: str: introduce `kstrtobool` function
Add a Rust wrapper for the kernel's `kstrtobool` function that converts
common user inputs into boolean values.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Almeida <daniel.almeida@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Hindborg <a.hindborg@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20250902-rnull-up-v6-16-v7-5-b5212cc89b98@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
Diffstat (limited to 'rust/kernel/str.rs')
-rw-r--r-- | rust/kernel/str.rs | 79 |
1 files changed, 79 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/rust/kernel/str.rs b/rust/kernel/str.rs index d8326f7bc9c1..d2f9ebc94b75 100644 --- a/rust/kernel/str.rs +++ b/rust/kernel/str.rs @@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ use crate::{ alloc::{flags::*, AllocError, KVec}, + error::{to_result, Result}, fmt::{self, Write}, prelude::*, }; @@ -920,6 +921,84 @@ impl Write for NullTerminatedFormatter<'_> { } } +/// # Safety +/// +/// - `string` must point to a null terminated string that is valid for read. +unsafe fn kstrtobool_raw(string: *const u8) -> Result<bool> { + let mut result: bool = false; + + // SAFETY: + // - By function safety requirement, `string` is a valid null-terminated string. + // - `result` is a valid `bool` that we own. + to_result(unsafe { bindings::kstrtobool(string, &mut result) })?; + Ok(result) +} + +/// Convert common user inputs into boolean values using the kernel's `kstrtobool` function. +/// +/// This routine returns `Ok(bool)` if the first character is one of 'YyTt1NnFf0', or +/// \[oO\]\[NnFf\] for "on" and "off". Otherwise it will return `Err(EINVAL)`. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// # use kernel::{c_str, str::kstrtobool}; +/// +/// // Lowercase +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("true")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("tr")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("t")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("twrong")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("false")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("f")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("yes")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("no")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("on")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("off")), Ok(false)); +/// +/// // Camel case +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("True")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("False")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("Yes")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("No")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("On")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("Off")), Ok(false)); +/// +/// // All caps +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("TRUE")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("FALSE")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("YES")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("NO")), Ok(false)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("ON")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("OFF")), Ok(false)); +/// +/// // Numeric +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("1")), Ok(true)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("0")), Ok(false)); +/// +/// // Invalid input +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("invalid")), Err(EINVAL)); +/// assert_eq!(kstrtobool(c_str!("2")), Err(EINVAL)); +/// ``` +pub fn kstrtobool(string: &CStr) -> Result<bool> { + // SAFETY: + // - The pointer returned by `CStr::as_char_ptr` is guaranteed to be + // null terminated. + // - `string` is live and thus the string is valid for read. + unsafe { kstrtobool_raw(string.as_char_ptr()) } +} + +/// Convert `&[u8]` to `bool` by deferring to [`kernel::str::kstrtobool`]. +/// +/// Only considers at most the first two bytes of `bytes`. +pub fn kstrtobool_bytes(bytes: &[u8]) -> Result<bool> { + // `ktostrbool` only considers the first two bytes of the input. + let stack_string = [*bytes.first().unwrap_or(&0), *bytes.get(1).unwrap_or(&0), 0]; + // SAFETY: `stack_string` is null terminated and it is live on the stack so + // it is valid for read. + unsafe { kstrtobool_raw(stack_string.as_ptr()) } +} + /// An owned string that is guaranteed to have exactly one `NUL` byte, which is at the end. /// /// Used for interoperability with kernel APIs that take C strings. |