1.. |msrv| replace:: 1.63.0 2 3Rust in QEMU 4============ 5 6Rust in QEMU is a project to enable using the Rust programming language 7to add new functionality to QEMU. 8 9Right now, the focus is on making it possible to write devices that inherit 10from ``SysBusDevice`` in `*safe*`__ Rust. Later, it may become possible 11to write other kinds of devices (e.g. PCI devices that can do DMA), 12complete boards, or backends (e.g. block device formats). 13 14__ https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/meet-safe-and-unsafe.html 15 16Building the Rust in QEMU code 17------------------------------ 18 19The Rust in QEMU code is included in the emulators via Meson. Meson 20invokes rustc directly, building static libraries that are then linked 21together with the C code. This is completely automatic when you run 22``make`` or ``ninja``. 23 24However, QEMU's build system also tries to be easy to use for people who 25are accustomed to the more "normal" Cargo-based development workflow. 26In particular: 27 28* the set of warnings and lints that are used to build QEMU always 29 comes from the ``rust/Cargo.toml`` workspace file 30 31* it is also possible to use ``cargo`` for common Rust-specific coding 32 tasks, in particular to invoke ``clippy``, ``rustfmt`` and ``rustdoc``. 33 34To this end, QEMU includes a ``build.rs`` build script that picks up 35generated sources from QEMU's build directory and puts it in Cargo's 36output directory (typically ``rust/target/``). A vanilla invocation 37of Cargo will complain that it cannot find the generated sources, 38which can be fixed in different ways: 39 40* by using special shorthand targets in the QEMU build directory:: 41 42 make clippy 43 make rustfmt 44 make rustdoc 45 46* by invoking ``cargo`` through the Meson `development environment`__ 47 feature:: 48 49 pyvenv/bin/meson devenv -w ../rust cargo clippy --tests 50 pyvenv/bin/meson devenv -w ../rust cargo fmt 51 52 If you are going to use ``cargo`` repeatedly, ``pyvenv/bin/meson devenv`` 53 will enter a shell where commands like ``cargo clippy`` just work. 54 55__ https://mesonbuild.com/Commands.html#devenv 56 57* by pointing the ``MESON_BUILD_ROOT`` to the top of your QEMU build 58 tree. This third method is useful if you are using ``rust-analyzer``; 59 you can set the environment variable through the 60 ``rust-analyzer.cargo.extraEnv`` setting. 61 62As shown above, you can use the ``--tests`` option as usual to operate on test 63code. Note however that you cannot *build* or run tests via ``cargo``, because 64they need support C code from QEMU that Cargo does not know about. Tests can 65be run via ``meson test`` or ``make``:: 66 67 make check-rust 68 69Building Rust code with ``--enable-modules`` is not supported yet. 70 71Supported tools 72''''''''''''''' 73 74QEMU supports rustc version 1.63.0 and newer. Notably, the following features 75are missing: 76 77* ``core::ffi`` (1.64.0). Use ``std::os::raw`` and ``std::ffi`` instead. 78 79* ``cast_mut()``/``cast_const()`` (1.65.0). Use ``as`` instead. 80 81* "let ... else" (1.65.0). Use ``if let`` instead. This is currently patched 82 in QEMU's vendored copy of the bilge crate. 83 84* Generic Associated Types (1.65.0) 85 86* ``CStr::from_bytes_with_nul()`` as a ``const`` function (1.72.0). 87 88* "Return position ``impl Trait`` in Traits" (1.75.0, blocker for including 89 the pinned-init create). 90 91* ``MaybeUninit::zeroed()`` as a ``const`` function (1.75.0). QEMU's 92 ``Zeroable`` trait can be implemented without ``MaybeUninit::zeroed()``, 93 so this would be just a cleanup. 94 95* ``c"" literals`` (stable in 1.77.0). QEMU provides a ``c_str!()`` macro 96 to define ``CStr`` constants easily 97 98* ``offset_of!`` (stable in 1.77.0). QEMU uses ``offset_of!()`` heavily; it 99 provides a replacement in the ``qemu_api`` crate, but it does not support 100 lifetime parameters and therefore ``&'a Something`` fields in the struct 101 may have to be replaced by ``NonNull<Something>``. *Nested* ``offset_of!`` 102 was only stabilized in Rust 1.82.0, but it is not used. 103 104* inline const expression (stable in 1.79.0), currently worked around with 105 associated constants in the ``FnCall`` trait. 106 107* associated constants have to be explicitly marked ``'static`` (`changed in 108 1.81.0`__) 109 110* ``&raw`` (stable in 1.82.0). Use ``addr_of!`` and ``addr_of_mut!`` instead, 111 though hopefully the need for raw pointers will go down over time. 112 113* ``new_uninit`` (stable in 1.82.0). This is used internally by the ``pinned_init`` 114 crate, which is planned for inclusion in QEMU, but it can be easily patched 115 out. 116 117* referencing statics in constants (stable in 1.83.0). For now use a const 118 function; this is an important limitation for QEMU's migration stream 119 architecture (VMState). Right now, VMState lacks type safety because 120 it is hard to place the ``VMStateField`` definitions in traits. 121 122* associated const equality would be nice to have for some users of 123 ``callbacks::FnCall``, but is still experimental. ``ASSERT_IS_SOME`` 124 replaces it. 125 126__ https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125258 127 128It is expected that QEMU will advance its minimum supported version of 129rustc to 1.77.0 as soon as possible; as of January 2025, blockers 130for that right now are Debian bookworm and 32-bit MIPS processors. 131This unfortunately means that references to statics in constants will 132remain an issue. 133 134QEMU also supports version 0.60.x of bindgen, which is missing option 135``--generate-cstr``. This option requires version 0.66.x and will 136be adopted as soon as supporting these older versions is not necessary 137anymore. 138 139Writing Rust code in QEMU 140------------------------- 141 142QEMU includes four crates: 143 144* ``qemu_api`` for bindings to C code and useful functionality 145 146* ``qemu_api_macros`` defines several procedural macros that are useful when 147 writing C code 148 149* ``pl011`` (under ``rust/hw/char/pl011``) and ``hpet`` (under ``rust/hw/timer/hpet``) 150 are sample devices that demonstrate ``qemu_api`` and ``qemu_api_macros``, and are 151 used to further develop them. These two crates are functional\ [#issues]_ replacements 152 for the ``hw/char/pl011.c`` and ``hw/timer/hpet.c`` files. 153 154.. [#issues] The ``pl011`` crate is synchronized with ``hw/char/pl011.c`` 155 as of commit 02b1f7f61928. The ``hpet`` crate is synchronized as of 156 commit f32352ff9e. Both are lacking tracing functionality; ``hpet`` 157 is also lacking support for migration. 158 159This section explains how to work with them. 160 161Status 162'''''' 163 164Modules of ``qemu_api`` can be defined as: 165 166- *complete*: ready for use in new devices; if applicable, the API supports the 167 full functionality available in C 168 169- *stable*: ready for production use, the API is safe and should not undergo 170 major changes 171 172- *proof of concept*: the API is subject to change but allows working with safe 173 Rust 174 175- *initial*: the API is in its initial stages; it requires large amount of 176 unsafe code; it might have soundness or type-safety issues 177 178The status of the modules is as follows: 179 180================ ====================== 181module status 182================ ====================== 183``assertions`` stable 184``bitops`` complete 185``callbacks`` complete 186``cell`` stable 187``c_str`` complete 188``errno`` complete 189``irq`` complete 190``memory`` stable 191``module`` complete 192``offset_of`` stable 193``qdev`` stable 194``qom`` stable 195``sysbus`` stable 196``timer`` stable 197``vmstate`` proof of concept 198``zeroable`` stable 199================ ====================== 200 201.. note:: 202 API stability is not a promise, if anything because the C APIs are not a stable 203 interface either. Also, ``unsafe`` interfaces may be replaced by safe interfaces 204 later. 205 206Naming convention 207''''''''''''''''' 208 209C function names usually are prefixed according to the data type that they 210apply to, for example ``timer_mod`` or ``sysbus_connect_irq``. Furthermore, 211both function and structs sometimes have a ``qemu_`` or ``QEMU`` prefix. 212Generally speaking, these are all removed in the corresponding Rust functions: 213``QEMUTimer`` becomes ``timer::Timer``, ``timer_mod`` becomes ``Timer::modify``, 214``sysbus_connect_irq`` becomes ``SysBusDeviceMethods::connect_irq``. 215 216Sometimes however a name appears multiple times in the QOM class hierarchy, 217and the only difference is in the prefix. An example is ``qdev_realize`` and 218``sysbus_realize``. In such cases, whenever a name is not unique in 219the hierarchy, always add the prefix to the classes that are lower in 220the hierarchy; for the top class, decide on a case by case basis. 221 222For example: 223 224========================== ========================================= 225``device_cold_reset()`` ``DeviceMethods::cold_reset()`` 226``pci_device_reset()`` ``PciDeviceMethods::pci_device_reset()`` 227``pci_bridge_reset()`` ``PciBridgeMethods::pci_bridge_reset()`` 228========================== ========================================= 229 230Here, the name is not exactly the same, but nevertheless ``PciDeviceMethods`` 231adds the prefix to avoid confusion, because the functionality of 232``device_cold_reset()`` and ``pci_device_reset()`` is subtly different. 233 234In this case, however, no prefix is needed: 235 236========================== ========================================= 237``device_realize()`` ``DeviceMethods::realize()`` 238``sysbus_realize()`` ``SysbusDeviceMethods::sysbus_realize()`` 239``pci_realize()`` ``PciDeviceMethods::pci_realize()`` 240========================== ========================================= 241 242Here, the lower classes do not add any functionality, and mostly 243provide extra compile-time checking; the basic *realize* functionality 244is the same for all devices. Therefore, ``DeviceMethods`` does not 245add the prefix. 246 247Whenever a name is unique in the hierarchy, instead, you should 248always remove the class name prefix. 249 250Common pitfalls 251''''''''''''''' 252 253Rust has very strict rules with respect to how you get an exclusive (``&mut``) 254reference; failure to respect those rules is a source of undefined behavior. 255In particular, even if a value is loaded from a raw mutable pointer (``*mut``), 256it *cannot* be casted to ``&mut`` unless the value was stored to the ``*mut`` 257from a mutable reference. Furthermore, it is undefined behavior if any 258shared reference was created between the store to the ``*mut`` and the load:: 259 260 let mut p: u32 = 42; 261 let p_mut = &mut p; // 1 262 let p_raw = p_mut as *mut u32; // 2 263 264 // p_raw keeps the mutable reference "alive" 265 266 let p_shared = &p; // 3 267 println!("access from &u32: {}", *p_shared); 268 269 // Bring back the mutable reference, its lifetime overlaps 270 // with that of a shared reference. 271 let p_mut = unsafe { &mut *p_raw }; // 4 272 println!("access from &mut 32: {}", *p_mut); 273 274 println!("access from &u32: {}", *p_shared); // 5 275 276These rules can be tested with `MIRI`__, for example. 277 278__ https://github.com/rust-lang/miri 279 280Almost all Rust code in QEMU will involve QOM objects, and pointers to these 281objects are *shared*, for example because they are part of the QOM composition 282tree. This creates exactly the above scenario: 283 2841. a QOM object is created 285 2862. a ``*mut`` is created, for example as the opaque value for a ``MemoryRegion`` 287 2883. the QOM object is placed in the composition tree 289 2904. a memory access dereferences the opaque value to a ``&mut`` 291 2925. but the shared reference is still present in the composition tree 293 294Because of this, QOM objects should almost always use ``&self`` instead 295of ``&mut self``; access to internal fields must use *interior mutability* 296to go from a shared reference to a ``&mut``. 297 298Whenever C code provides you with an opaque ``void *``, avoid converting it 299to a Rust mutable reference, and use a shared reference instead. The 300``qemu_api::cell`` module provides wrappers that can be used to tell the 301Rust compiler about interior mutability, and optionally to enforce locking 302rules for the "Big QEMU Lock". In the future, similar cell types might 303also be provided for ``AioContext``-based locking as well. 304 305In particular, device code will usually rely on the ``BqlRefCell`` and 306``BqlCell`` type to ensure that data is accessed correctly under the 307"Big QEMU Lock". These cell types are also known to the ``vmstate`` 308crate, which is able to "look inside" them when building an in-memory 309representation of a ``struct``'s layout. Note that the same is not true 310of a ``RefCell`` or ``Mutex``. 311 312Bindings code instead will usually use the ``Opaque`` type, which hides 313the contents of the underlying struct and can be easily converted to 314a raw pointer, for use in calls to C functions. It can be used for 315example as follows:: 316 317 #[repr(transparent)] 318 #[derive(Debug, qemu_api_macros::Wrapper)] 319 pub struct Object(Opaque<bindings::Object>); 320 321where the special ``derive`` macro provides useful methods such as 322``from_raw``, ``as_ptr`, ``as_mut_ptr`` and ``raw_get``. The bindings will 323then manually check for the big QEMU lock with assertions, which allows 324the wrapper to be declared thread-safe:: 325 326 unsafe impl Send for Object {} 327 unsafe impl Sync for Object {} 328 329Writing bindings to C code 330'''''''''''''''''''''''''' 331 332Here are some things to keep in mind when working on the ``qemu_api`` crate. 333 334**Look at existing code** 335 Very often, similar idioms in C code correspond to similar tricks in 336 Rust bindings. If the C code uses ``offsetof``, look at qdev properties 337 or ``vmstate``. If the C code has a complex const struct, look at 338 ``MemoryRegion``. Reuse existing patterns for handling lifetimes; 339 for example use ``&T`` for QOM objects that do not need a reference 340 count (including those that can be embedded in other objects) and 341 ``Owned<T>`` for those that need it. 342 343**Use the type system** 344 Bindings often will need access information that is specific to a type 345 (either a builtin one or a user-defined one) in order to pass it to C 346 functions. Put them in a trait and access it through generic parameters. 347 The ``vmstate`` module has examples of how to retrieve type information 348 for the fields of a Rust ``struct``. 349 350**Prefer unsafe traits to unsafe functions** 351 Unsafe traits are much easier to prove correct than unsafe functions. 352 They are an excellent place to store metadata that can later be accessed 353 by generic functions. C code usually places metadata in global variables; 354 in Rust, they can be stored in traits and then turned into ``static`` 355 variables. Often, unsafe traits can be generated by procedural macros. 356 357**Document limitations due to old Rust versions** 358 If you need to settle for an inferior solution because of the currently 359 supported set of Rust versions, document it in the source and in this 360 file. This ensures that it can be fixed when the minimum supported 361 version is bumped. 362 363**Keep locking in mind**. 364 When marking a type ``Sync``, be careful of whether it needs the big 365 QEMU lock. Use ``BqlCell`` and ``BqlRefCell`` for interior data, 366 or assert ``bql_locked()``. 367 368**Don't be afraid of complexity, but document and isolate it** 369 It's okay to be tricky; device code is written more often than bindings 370 code and it's important that it is idiomatic. However, you should strive 371 to isolate any tricks in a place (for example a ``struct``, a trait 372 or a macro) where it can be documented and tested. If needed, include 373 toy versions of the code in the documentation. 374 375Writing procedural macros 376''''''''''''''''''''''''' 377 378By conventions, procedural macros are split in two functions, one 379returning ``Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, MacroError>`` with the body of 380the procedural macro, and the second returning ``proc_macro::TokenStream`` 381which is the actual procedural macro. The former's name is the same as 382the latter with the ``_or_error`` suffix. The code for the latter is more 383or less fixed; it follows the following template, which is fixed apart 384from the type after ``as`` in the invocation of ``parse_macro_input!``:: 385 386 #[proc_macro_derive(Object)] 387 pub fn derive_object(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream { 388 let input = parse_macro_input!(input as DeriveInput); 389 let expanded = derive_object_or_error(input).unwrap_or_else(Into::into); 390 391 TokenStream::from(expanded) 392 } 393 394The ``qemu_api_macros`` crate has utility functions to examine a 395``DeriveInput`` and perform common checks (e.g. looking for a struct 396with named fields). These functions return ``Result<..., MacroError>`` 397and can be used easily in the procedural macro function:: 398 399 fn derive_object_or_error(input: DeriveInput) -> 400 Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, MacroError> 401 { 402 is_c_repr(&input, "#[derive(Object)]")?; 403 404 let name = &input.ident; 405 let parent = &get_fields(&input, "#[derive(Object)]")?[0].ident; 406 ... 407 } 408 409Use procedural macros with care. They are mostly useful for two purposes: 410 411* Performing consistency checks; for example ``#[derive(Object)]`` checks 412 that the structure has ``#[repr[C])`` and that the type of the first field 413 is consistent with the ``ObjectType`` declaration. 414 415* Extracting information from Rust source code into traits, typically based 416 on types and attributes. For example, ``#[derive(TryInto)]`` builds an 417 implementation of ``TryFrom``, and it uses the ``#[repr(...)]`` attribute 418 as the ``TryFrom`` source and error types. 419 420Procedural macros can be hard to debug and test; if the code generation 421exceeds a few lines of code, it may be worthwhile to delegate work to 422"regular" declarative (``macro_rules!``) macros and write unit tests for 423those instead. 424 425 426Coding style 427'''''''''''' 428 429Code should pass clippy and be formatted with rustfmt. 430 431Right now, only the nightly version of ``rustfmt`` is supported. This 432might change in the future. While CI checks for correct formatting via 433``cargo fmt --check``, maintainers can fix this for you when applying patches. 434 435It is expected that ``qemu_api`` provides full ``rustdoc`` documentation for 436bindings that are in their final shape or close. 437 438Adding dependencies 439------------------- 440 441Generally, the set of dependent crates is kept small. Think twice before 442adding a new external crate, especially if it comes with a large set of 443dependencies itself. Sometimes QEMU only needs a small subset of the 444functionality; see for example QEMU's ``assertions`` or ``c_str`` modules. 445 446On top of this recommendation, adding external crates to QEMU is a 447slightly complicated process, mostly due to the need to teach Meson how 448to build them. While Meson has initial support for parsing ``Cargo.lock`` 449files, it is still highly experimental and is therefore not used. 450 451Therefore, external crates must be added as subprojects for Meson to 452learn how to build them, as well as to the relevant ``Cargo.toml`` files. 453The versions specified in ``rust/Cargo.lock`` must be the same as the 454subprojects; note that the ``rust/`` directory forms a Cargo `workspace`__, 455and therefore there is a single lock file for the whole build. 456 457__ https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html#virtual-workspace 458 459Choose a version of the crate that works with QEMU's minimum supported 460Rust version (|msrv|). 461 462Second, a new ``wrap`` file must be added to teach Meson how to download the 463crate. The wrap file must be named ``NAME-SEMVER-rs.wrap``, where ``NAME`` 464is the name of the crate and ``SEMVER`` is the version up to and including the 465first non-zero number. For example, a crate with version ``0.2.3`` will use 466``0.2`` for its ``SEMVER``, while a crate with version ``1.0.84`` will use ``1``. 467 468Third, the Meson rules to build the crate must be added at 469``subprojects/NAME-SEMVER-rs/meson.build``. Generally this includes: 470 471* ``subproject`` and ``dependency`` lines for all dependent crates 472 473* a ``static_library`` or ``rust.proc_macro`` line to perform the actual build 474 475* ``declare_dependency`` and a ``meson.override_dependency`` lines to expose 476 the result to QEMU and to other subprojects 477 478Remember to add ``native: true`` to ``dependency``, ``static_library`` and 479``meson.override_dependency`` for dependencies of procedural macros. 480If a crate is needed in both procedural macros and QEMU binaries, everything 481apart from ``subproject`` must be duplicated to build both native and 482non-native versions of the crate. 483 484It's important to specify the right compiler options. These include: 485 486* the language edition (which can be found in the ``Cargo.toml`` file) 487 488* the ``--cfg`` (which have to be "reverse engineered" from the ``build.rs`` 489 file of the crate). 490 491* usually, a ``--cap-lints allow`` argument to hide warnings from rustc 492 or clippy. 493 494After every change to the ``meson.build`` file you have to update the patched 495version with ``meson subprojects update --reset ``NAME-SEMVER-rs``. This might 496be automated in the future. 497 498Also, after every change to the ``meson.build`` file it is strongly suggested to 499do a dummy change to the ``.wrap`` file (for example adding a comment like 500``# version 2``), which will help Meson notice that the subproject is out of date. 501 502As a last step, add the new subproject to ``scripts/archive-source.sh``, 503``scripts/make-release`` and ``subprojects/.gitignore``. 504