uefi-raw 0.9.0

Raw UEFI types and bindings for protocols, boot, and runtime services. This can serve as base for an UEFI firmware implementation or a high-level wrapper to access UEFI functionality from an UEFI image.
Documentation
# API Guidelines

The `uefi-raw` crate should closely match the definitions in the [UEFI
Specification], with only some light changes to make it more friendly for use in
Rust (e.g. casing follows Rust's conventions and modules are used to provide
some hierarchy).

This document describes the API rules in detail. Some of these rules can be
checked with `cargo xtask check-raw`, and that check is run automatically in CI
as well. Other rules require human verification.

If you are contributing to this crate and run into any problems, such as a case
that isn't covered by the rules, or a case where following the rules seems like
it will lead to a bad API, don't hesitate to let us know (e.g. by filing an
[issue]).

## Naming

Type names should match the corresponding spec names, but drop the `EFI_` prefix
and change to `UpperCamelCase` to match Rust's convention. For example,
`EFI_LOAD_FILE_PROTOCOL` becomes `LoadFileProtocol`.

Struct field names and function parameter names should match the corresponding
spec names, but change the case to `snake_case` to match Rust's convention.

When defining a type that isn't part of the spec (for example, a `bitflags!`
type that represents a collection of constants in the spec), prefix the name
with a closely-associated type that is defined in the spec. For example, mode
constants for a `FooBarProtocol` could be collected into a `FooBarMode` type.

It's OK to introduce minor naming changes from the specification where it
improves clarity.

## Layout

All types must be `repr(C)`, `repr(C, packed)`, or `repr(transparent)`.

Types created with the `bitflags!` macro must set `repr(transparent)`.

### Dynamically Sized Types

Some types in the spec end with a variable-length array. It's possible to
represent these as [Dynamically Sized Types], but that should be left to
higher-level APIs. In this crate, add a zero-length array at the end of the
struct to represent the field. For example, if a struct in the spec ends with
`CHAR16 Name[];`, represent that in Rust with `name: [Char16; 0]`.

This pattern of using a `&Header` to work with dynamically-sized data is
rejected by the Stacked Borrows model, but allowed by Tree Borrows. See [UCG
issue 256] for more info.

## Visibility

Everything must have `pub` visibility.

## Constants

Use associated constants where possible instead of top-level constants.

Protocols must have an associated `GUID` constant, for example:

```rust
impl RngProtocol {
    pub const GUID: Guid = guid!("3152bca5-eade-433d-862e-c01cdc291f44");
}
```

## Pointers

Use pointers (`*const`/`*mut`) instead of references (`&`/`&mut`).

Function pointers must be `unsafe` and have an explicit ABI (almost always
`efiapi`). If a function pointer field can be null it must be wrapped in
`Option`. Most function pointer fields do not need to allow null pointers
though, unless the spec says otherwise.

### Mutability

Pointer mutability (`*mut` vs `*const`) is not a UB concern the way reference
mutability is. In general, it is not UB to `cast_mut` a const pointer and write
through it. So picking `*mut` vs `*const` is more about semantics.

Pointer fields in structs should always be `*mut`. Even if the pointer should
not be used for mutation by bootloaders and OSes, these types are intended to be
useful for UEFI _implementations_ as well, which may need to mutate data.

In function parameters, pick between `*const` and `*mut` based on how the
parameter is described in the spec. An `OUT` or `IN OUT` pointer must be
`*mut`. An `IN` pointer _may_ be `*mut`, but `*const` may be more appropriate if
the parameter is described as being source data.

## Allowed top-level items

The allowed top-level items are `const`, `impl`, `macro`, `struct`, and
`type`.

Rust `enum`s are not allowed; use the `bitflags!` or `newtype_enum!` macros
instead.

[UEFI Specification]: https://uefi.org/specifications
[issue]: https://github.com/rust-osdev/uefi-rs/issues/new
[Dynamically Sized Types]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/dynamically-sized-types.html
[UCG issue 256]: https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/256