From 8cdfa445d6629ffef4cb84967ff7017654045bc2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: mo khan Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2025 18:36:06 -0600 Subject: chore: add vendor directory --- vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs | 184 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 184 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs (limited to 'vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs') diff --git a/vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs b/vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs new file mode 100644 index 00000000..aa67c9ea --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/rustix/src/thread/id.rs @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +//! CPU and thread identifiers. +//! +//! # Safety +//! +//! The `Cpuid`, type can be constructed from raw integers, which is marked +//! unsafe because actual OS's assign special meaning to some integer values. + +#![allow(unsafe_code)] +use crate::{backend, io}; +#[cfg(linux_kernel)] +use backend::thread::types::RawCpuid; + +pub use crate::pid::{Pid, RawPid}; +pub use crate::ugid::{Gid, RawGid, RawUid, Uid}; + +/// A Linux CPU ID. +#[cfg(linux_kernel)] +#[repr(transparent)] +#[derive(Copy, Clone, Eq, PartialEq, Debug, Hash)] +pub struct Cpuid(RawCpuid); + +#[cfg(linux_kernel)] +impl Cpuid { + /// Converts a `RawCpuid` into a `Cpuid`. + /// + /// # Safety + /// + /// `raw` must be the value of a valid Linux CPU ID. + #[inline] + pub const unsafe fn from_raw(raw: RawCpuid) -> Self { + Self(raw) + } + + /// Converts a `Cpuid` into a `RawCpuid`. + #[inline] + pub const fn as_raw(self) -> RawCpuid { + self.0 + } +} + +/// `gettid()`—Returns the thread ID. +/// +/// This returns the OS thread ID, which is not necessarily the same as the +/// Rust's `std::thread::Thread::id` or the pthread ID. +/// +/// This function always does a system call. To avoid this overhead, ask the +/// thread runtime for the ID instead, for example using [`libc::gettid`] or +/// [`origin::thread::current_id`]. +/// +/// [`libc::gettid`]: https://docs.rs/libc/*/libc/fn.gettid.html +/// [`origin::thread::current_id`]: https://docs.rs/origin/*/origin/thread/fn.current_id.html +/// +/// # References +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/gettid.2.html +#[inline] +#[must_use] +pub fn gettid() -> Pid { + backend::thread::syscalls::gettid() +} + +/// `setuid(uid)`—Sets the effective user ID of the calling thread. +/// +/// # Warning +/// +/// This is not the `setuid` you are looking for… POSIX requires uids to be +/// process granular, but on Linux they are per-thread. Thus, this call only +/// changes the uid for the current *thread*, not the entire process even +/// though that is in violation of the POSIX standard. +/// +/// For details on this distinction, see the C library vs. kernel differences +/// in the [manual page][linux_notes]. This call implements the kernel +/// behavior. +/// +/// # References +/// - [POSIX] +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [POSIX]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/functions/setuid.html +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setuid.2.html +/// [linux_notes]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setuid.2.html#NOTES +#[inline] +pub fn set_thread_uid(uid: Uid) -> io::Result<()> { + backend::thread::syscalls::setuid_thread(uid) +} + +/// `setresuid(ruid, euid, suid)`—Sets the real, effective, and saved user ID +/// of the calling thread. +/// +/// # Warning +/// +/// This is not the `setresuid` you are looking for… POSIX requires uids to be +/// process granular, but on Linux they are per-thread. Thus, this call only +/// changes the uid for the current *thread*, not the entire process even +/// though that is in violation of the POSIX standard. +/// +/// For details on this distinction, see the C library vs. kernel differences +/// in the [manual page][linux_notes] and the notes in [`set_thread_uid`]. This +/// call implements the kernel behavior. +/// +/// # References +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setresuid.2.html +/// [linux_notes]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setresuid.2.html#NOTES +#[inline] +pub fn set_thread_res_uid(ruid: Uid, euid: Uid, suid: Uid) -> io::Result<()> { + backend::thread::syscalls::setresuid_thread(ruid, euid, suid) +} + +/// `setgid(gid)`—Sets the effective group ID of the current thread. +/// +/// # Warning +/// +/// This is not the `setgid` you are looking for… POSIX requires gids to be +/// process granular, but on Linux they are per-thread. Thus, this call only +/// changes the gid for the current *thread*, not the entire process even +/// though that is in violation of the POSIX standard. +/// +/// For details on this distinction, see the C library vs. kernel differences +/// in the [manual page][linux_notes]. This call implements the kernel +/// behavior. +/// +/// # References +/// - [POSIX] +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [POSIX]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9799919799/functions/setgid.html +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setgid.2.html +/// [linux_notes]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setgid.2.html#NOTES +#[inline] +pub fn set_thread_gid(gid: Gid) -> io::Result<()> { + backend::thread::syscalls::setgid_thread(gid) +} + +/// `setresgid(rgid, egid, sgid)`—Sets the real, effective, and saved group +/// ID of the current thread. +/// +/// # Warning +/// +/// This is not the `setresgid` you are looking for… POSIX requires gids to be +/// process granular, but on Linux they are per-thread. Thus, this call only +/// changes the gid for the current *thread*, not the entire process even +/// though that is in violation of the POSIX standard. +/// +/// For details on this distinction, see the C library vs. kernel differences +/// in the [manual page][linux_notes] and the notes in [`set_thread_gid`]. This +/// call implements the kernel behavior. +/// +/// # References +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setresgid.2.html +/// [linux_notes]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setresgid.2.html#NOTES +#[inline] +pub fn set_thread_res_gid(rgid: Gid, egid: Gid, sgid: Gid) -> io::Result<()> { + backend::thread::syscalls::setresgid_thread(rgid, egid, sgid) +} + +/// `setgroups(groups)`—Sets the supplementary group IDs for the calling +/// thread. +/// +/// # Warning +/// +/// This is not the `setgroups` you are looking for… POSIX requires gids to be +/// process granular, but on Linux they are per-thread. Thus, this call only +/// changes the gids for the current *thread*, not the entire process even +/// though that is in violation of the POSIX standard. +/// +/// For details on this distinction, see the C library vs. kernel differences +/// in the [manual page][linux_notes]. This call implements the kernel +/// behavior. +/// +/// # References +/// - [Linux] +/// +/// [Linux]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setgroups.2.html +/// [linux_notes]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/setgroups.2.html#NOTES +#[cfg(linux_kernel)] +#[inline] +pub fn set_thread_groups(groups: &[Gid]) -> io::Result<()> { + backend::thread::syscalls::setgroups_thread(groups) +} -- cgit v1.2.3