xref: /linux-6.15/include/linux/init.h (revision a17627ef)
1 #ifndef _LINUX_INIT_H
2 #define _LINUX_INIT_H
3 
4 #include <linux/compiler.h>
5 
6 /* These macros are used to mark some functions or
7  * initialized data (doesn't apply to uninitialized data)
8  * as `initialization' functions. The kernel can take this
9  * as hint that the function is used only during the initialization
10  * phase and free up used memory resources after
11  *
12  * Usage:
13  * For functions:
14  *
15  * You should add __init immediately before the function name, like:
16  *
17  * static void __init initme(int x, int y)
18  * {
19  *    extern int z; z = x * y;
20  * }
21  *
22  * If the function has a prototype somewhere, you can also add
23  * __init between closing brace of the prototype and semicolon:
24  *
25  * extern int initialize_foobar_device(int, int, int) __init;
26  *
27  * For initialized data:
28  * You should insert __initdata between the variable name and equal
29  * sign followed by value, e.g.:
30  *
31  * static int init_variable __initdata = 0;
32  * static char linux_logo[] __initdata = { 0x32, 0x36, ... };
33  *
34  * Don't forget to initialize data not at file scope, i.e. within a function,
35  * as gcc otherwise puts the data into the bss section and not into the init
36  * section.
37  *
38  * Also note, that this data cannot be "const".
39  */
40 
41 /* These are for everybody (although not all archs will actually
42    discard it in modules) */
43 #define __init		__attribute__ ((__section__ (".init.text")))
44 #define __initdata	__attribute__ ((__section__ (".init.data")))
45 #define __exitdata	__attribute__ ((__section__(".exit.data")))
46 #define __exit_call	__attribute_used__ __attribute__ ((__section__ (".exitcall.exit")))
47 
48 /* modpost check for section mismatches during the kernel build.
49  * A section mismatch happens when there are references from a
50  * code or data section to an init section (both code or data).
51  * The init sections are (for most archs) discarded by the kernel
52  * when early init has completed so all such references are potential bugs.
53  * For exit sections the same issue exists.
54  * The following markers are used for the cases where the reference to
55  * the init/exit section (code or data) is valid and will teach modpost
56  * not to issue a warning.
57  * The markers follow same syntax rules as __init / __initdata. */
58 #define __init_refok     noinline __attribute__ ((__section__ (".text.init.refok")))
59 #define __initdata_refok          __attribute__ ((__section__ (".data.init.refok")))
60 
61 #ifdef MODULE
62 #define __exit		__attribute__ ((__section__(".exit.text")))
63 #else
64 #define __exit		__attribute_used__ __attribute__ ((__section__(".exit.text")))
65 #endif
66 
67 /* For assembly routines */
68 #define __INIT		.section	".init.text","ax"
69 #define __FINIT		.previous
70 #define __INITDATA	.section	".init.data","aw"
71 
72 #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
73 /*
74  * Used for initialization calls..
75  */
76 typedef int (*initcall_t)(void);
77 typedef void (*exitcall_t)(void);
78 
79 extern initcall_t __con_initcall_start[], __con_initcall_end[];
80 extern initcall_t __security_initcall_start[], __security_initcall_end[];
81 
82 /* Defined in init/main.c */
83 extern char __initdata boot_command_line[];
84 extern char *saved_command_line;
85 extern unsigned int reset_devices;
86 
87 /* used by init/main.c */
88 void setup_arch(char **);
89 void prepare_namespace(void);
90 
91 #endif
92 
93 #ifndef MODULE
94 
95 #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
96 
97 /* initcalls are now grouped by functionality into separate
98  * subsections. Ordering inside the subsections is determined
99  * by link order.
100  * For backwards compatibility, initcall() puts the call in
101  * the device init subsection.
102  *
103  * The `id' arg to __define_initcall() is needed so that multiple initcalls
104  * can point at the same handler without causing duplicate-symbol build errors.
105  */
106 
107 #define __define_initcall(level,fn,id) \
108 	static initcall_t __initcall_##fn##id __attribute_used__ \
109 	__attribute__((__section__(".initcall" level ".init"))) = fn
110 
111 /*
112  * A "pure" initcall has no dependencies on anything else, and purely
113  * initializes variables that couldn't be statically initialized.
114  *
115  * This only exists for built-in code, not for modules.
116  */
117 #define pure_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("0",fn,1)
118 
119 #define core_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("1",fn,1)
120 #define core_initcall_sync(fn)		__define_initcall("1s",fn,1s)
121 #define postcore_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("2",fn,2)
122 #define postcore_initcall_sync(fn)	__define_initcall("2s",fn,2s)
123 #define arch_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("3",fn,3)
124 #define arch_initcall_sync(fn)		__define_initcall("3s",fn,3s)
125 #define subsys_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("4",fn,4)
126 #define subsys_initcall_sync(fn)	__define_initcall("4s",fn,4s)
127 #define fs_initcall(fn)			__define_initcall("5",fn,5)
128 #define fs_initcall_sync(fn)		__define_initcall("5s",fn,5s)
129 #define rootfs_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("rootfs",fn,rootfs)
130 #define device_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("6",fn,6)
131 #define device_initcall_sync(fn)	__define_initcall("6s",fn,6s)
132 #define late_initcall(fn)		__define_initcall("7",fn,7)
133 #define late_initcall_sync(fn)		__define_initcall("7s",fn,7s)
134 
135 #define __initcall(fn) device_initcall(fn)
136 
137 #define __exitcall(fn) \
138 	static exitcall_t __exitcall_##fn __exit_call = fn
139 
140 #define console_initcall(fn) \
141 	static initcall_t __initcall_##fn \
142 	__attribute_used__ __attribute__((__section__(".con_initcall.init")))=fn
143 
144 #define security_initcall(fn) \
145 	static initcall_t __initcall_##fn \
146 	__attribute_used__ __attribute__((__section__(".security_initcall.init"))) = fn
147 
148 struct obs_kernel_param {
149 	const char *str;
150 	int (*setup_func)(char *);
151 	int early;
152 };
153 
154 /*
155  * Only for really core code.  See moduleparam.h for the normal way.
156  *
157  * Force the alignment so the compiler doesn't space elements of the
158  * obs_kernel_param "array" too far apart in .init.setup.
159  */
160 #define __setup_param(str, unique_id, fn, early)			\
161 	static char __setup_str_##unique_id[] __initdata = str;	\
162 	static struct obs_kernel_param __setup_##unique_id	\
163 		__attribute_used__				\
164 		__attribute__((__section__(".init.setup")))	\
165 		__attribute__((aligned((sizeof(long)))))	\
166 		= { __setup_str_##unique_id, fn, early }
167 
168 #define __setup_null_param(str, unique_id)			\
169 	__setup_param(str, unique_id, NULL, 0)
170 
171 #define __setup(str, fn)					\
172 	__setup_param(str, fn, fn, 0)
173 
174 #define __obsolete_setup(str)					\
175 	__setup_null_param(str, __LINE__)
176 
177 /* NOTE: fn is as per module_param, not __setup!  Emits warning if fn
178  * returns non-zero. */
179 #define early_param(str, fn)					\
180 	__setup_param(str, fn, fn, 1)
181 
182 /* Relies on boot_command_line being set */
183 void __init parse_early_param(void);
184 #endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
185 
186 /**
187  * module_init() - driver initialization entry point
188  * @x: function to be run at kernel boot time or module insertion
189  *
190  * module_init() will either be called during do_initcalls() (if
191  * builtin) or at module insertion time (if a module).  There can only
192  * be one per module.
193  */
194 #define module_init(x)	__initcall(x);
195 
196 /**
197  * module_exit() - driver exit entry point
198  * @x: function to be run when driver is removed
199  *
200  * module_exit() will wrap the driver clean-up code
201  * with cleanup_module() when used with rmmod when
202  * the driver is a module.  If the driver is statically
203  * compiled into the kernel, module_exit() has no effect.
204  * There can only be one per module.
205  */
206 #define module_exit(x)	__exitcall(x);
207 
208 #else /* MODULE */
209 
210 /* Don't use these in modules, but some people do... */
211 #define core_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
212 #define postcore_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
213 #define arch_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
214 #define subsys_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
215 #define fs_initcall(fn)			module_init(fn)
216 #define device_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
217 #define late_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
218 
219 #define security_initcall(fn)		module_init(fn)
220 
221 /* These macros create a dummy inline: gcc 2.9x does not count alias
222  as usage, hence the `unused function' warning when __init functions
223  are declared static. We use the dummy __*_module_inline functions
224  both to kill the warning and check the type of the init/cleanup
225  function. */
226 
227 /* Each module must use one module_init(), or one no_module_init */
228 #define module_init(initfn)					\
229 	static inline initcall_t __inittest(void)		\
230 	{ return initfn; }					\
231 	int init_module(void) __attribute__((alias(#initfn)));
232 
233 /* This is only required if you want to be unloadable. */
234 #define module_exit(exitfn)					\
235 	static inline exitcall_t __exittest(void)		\
236 	{ return exitfn; }					\
237 	void cleanup_module(void) __attribute__((alias(#exitfn)));
238 
239 #define __setup_param(str, unique_id, fn)	/* nothing */
240 #define __setup_null_param(str, unique_id) 	/* nothing */
241 #define __setup(str, func) 			/* nothing */
242 #define __obsolete_setup(str) 			/* nothing */
243 #endif
244 
245 /* Data marked not to be saved by software suspend */
246 #define __nosavedata __attribute__ ((__section__ (".data.nosave")))
247 
248 /* This means "can be init if no module support, otherwise module load
249    may call it." */
250 #ifdef CONFIG_MODULES
251 #define __init_or_module
252 #define __initdata_or_module
253 #else
254 #define __init_or_module __init
255 #define __initdata_or_module __initdata
256 #endif /*CONFIG_MODULES*/
257 
258 #ifdef CONFIG_HOTPLUG
259 #define __devinit
260 #define __devinitdata
261 #define __devexit
262 #define __devexitdata
263 #else
264 #define __devinit __init
265 #define __devinitdata __initdata
266 #define __devexit __exit
267 #define __devexitdata __exitdata
268 #endif
269 
270 #ifdef CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU
271 #define __cpuinit
272 #define __cpuinitdata
273 #define __cpuexit
274 #define __cpuexitdata
275 #else
276 #define __cpuinit	__init
277 #define __cpuinitdata __initdata
278 #define __cpuexit __exit
279 #define __cpuexitdata	__exitdata
280 #endif
281 
282 #if defined(CONFIG_MEMORY_HOTPLUG) || defined(CONFIG_ACPI_HOTPLUG_MEMORY) \
283 	|| defined(CONFIG_ACPI_HOTPLUG_MEMORY_MODULE)
284 #define __meminit
285 #define __meminitdata
286 #define __memexit
287 #define __memexitdata
288 #else
289 #define __meminit	__init
290 #define __meminitdata __initdata
291 #define __memexit __exit
292 #define __memexitdata	__exitdata
293 #endif
294 
295 /* Functions marked as __devexit may be discarded at kernel link time, depending
296    on config options.  Newer versions of binutils detect references from
297    retained sections to discarded sections and flag an error.  Pointers to
298    __devexit functions must use __devexit_p(function_name), the wrapper will
299    insert either the function_name or NULL, depending on the config options.
300  */
301 #if defined(MODULE) || defined(CONFIG_HOTPLUG)
302 #define __devexit_p(x) x
303 #else
304 #define __devexit_p(x) NULL
305 #endif
306 
307 #ifdef MODULE
308 #define __exit_p(x) x
309 #else
310 #define __exit_p(x) NULL
311 #endif
312 
313 #endif /* _LINUX_INIT_H */
314