On Thu Mar 27, 2025 at 8:44 PM CET, Tamir Duberstein wrote: > On Thu, Mar 27, 2025 at 10:15 AM Tamir Duberstein <tam...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 6:15 PM Benno Lossin <benno.los...@proton.me> wrote: >> > On Wed Mar 26, 2025 at 11:09 PM CET, Tamir Duberstein wrote: >> > > On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 5:09 PM Benno Lossin <benno.los...@proton.me> >> > > wrote: >> > >> On Wed Mar 26, 2025 at 8:06 PM CET, Tamir Duberstein wrote: >> > >> > On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 1:36 PM Benno Lossin <benno.los...@proton.me> >> > >> > wrote: >> > >> >> On Wed Mar 26, 2025 at 5:57 PM CET, Tamir Duberstein wrote: >> > >> >> > >> > >> >> > Yeah, we should do this - but again: not relevant in this >> > >> >> > discussion. >> > >> >> >> > >> >> I think it's pretty relevant. >> > >> > >> > >> > It's not relevant because we're no longer talking about transmuting >> > >> > pointer to pointer. The two options are: >> > >> > 1. transmute reference to reference. >> > >> > 2. coerce reference to pointer, `as` cast pointer to pointer (triggers >> > >> > `ptr_as_ptr`), reborrow pointer to reference. >> > >> > >> > >> > If anyone can help me understand why (2) is better than (1), I'd >> > >> > certainly appreciate it. >> > >> >> > >> I am very confident that (2) is correct. With (1) I'm not sure (see >> > >> above), so that's why I mentioned it. >> > > >> > > Can you help me understand why you're confident about (2) but not (1)? >> > >> > My explanation from above explains why I'm not confident about (1): >> > >> > For ptr-to-int transmutes, I know that they will probably remove >> > provenance, hence I am a bit cautious about using them for ptr-to-ptr >> > or >> > ref-to-ref. >> > >> > The reason I'm confident about (2) is that that is the canonical way to >> > cast the type of a reference pointing to an `!Sized` value. >> >> Do you have a citation, other than the transmute doc?
Not that I am aware of anything. > Turns out this appeases clippy: > > diff --git a/rust/kernel/uaccess.rs b/rust/kernel/uaccess.rs > index 80a9782b1c6e..7a6fc78fc314 100644 > --- a/rust/kernel/uaccess.rs > +++ b/rust/kernel/uaccess.rs > @@ -240,9 +240,10 @@ pub fn read_raw(&mut self, out: &mut > [MaybeUninit<u8>]) -> Result { > /// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address, > or if the read goes out of > /// bounds of this [`UserSliceReader`]. This call may modify > `out` even if it returns an error. > pub fn read_slice(&mut self, out: &mut [u8]) -> Result { > + let out: *mut [u8] = out; > // SAFETY: The types are compatible and `read_raw` doesn't > write uninitialized bytes to > // `out`. > - let out = unsafe { &mut *(out as *mut [u8] as *mut > [MaybeUninit<u8>]) }; > + let out = unsafe { &mut *(out as *mut [MaybeUninit<u8>]) }; > self.read_raw(out) > } Seems like your email client auto-wrapped that :( > Benno, would that work for you? Same in str.rs, of course. For this specific case, I do have a `cast_slice_mut` function I mentioned in the other thread, but that is still stuck in the untrusted data series, I hope that it's ready tomorrow or maybe next week. I'd prefer if we use that (since its implementation also doesn't use `as` casts :). But if you can't wait, then the above is fine. --- Cheers, Benno