| 1 | // Copyright 2018 Developers of the Rand project. |
| 2 | // |
| 3 | // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or |
| 4 | // https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license |
| 5 | // <LICENSE-MIT or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your |
| 6 | // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed |
| 7 | // except according to those terms. |
| 8 | |
| 9 | //! Thread-local random number generator |
| 10 | |
| 11 | use core::cell::UnsafeCell; |
| 12 | use std::rc::Rc; |
| 13 | use std::thread_local; |
| 14 | |
| 15 | use super::std::Core; |
| 16 | use crate::rngs::adapter::ReseedingRng; |
| 17 | use crate::rngs::OsRng; |
| 18 | use crate::{CryptoRng, Error, RngCore, SeedableRng}; |
| 19 | |
| 20 | // Rationale for using `UnsafeCell` in `ThreadRng`: |
| 21 | // |
| 22 | // Previously we used a `RefCell`, with an overhead of ~15%. There will only |
| 23 | // ever be one mutable reference to the interior of the `UnsafeCell`, because |
| 24 | // we only have such a reference inside `next_u32`, `next_u64`, etc. Within a |
| 25 | // single thread (which is the definition of `ThreadRng`), there will only ever |
| 26 | // be one of these methods active at a time. |
| 27 | // |
| 28 | // A possible scenario where there could be multiple mutable references is if |
| 29 | // `ThreadRng` is used inside `next_u32` and co. But the implementation is |
| 30 | // completely under our control. We just have to ensure none of them use |
| 31 | // `ThreadRng` internally, which is nonsensical anyway. We should also never run |
| 32 | // `ThreadRng` in destructors of its implementation, which is also nonsensical. |
| 33 | |
| 34 | |
| 35 | // Number of generated bytes after which to reseed `ThreadRng`. |
| 36 | // According to benchmarks, reseeding has a noticeable impact with thresholds |
| 37 | // of 32 kB and less. We choose 64 kB to avoid significant overhead. |
| 38 | const THREAD_RNG_RESEED_THRESHOLD: u64 = 1024 * 64; |
| 39 | |
| 40 | /// A reference to the thread-local generator |
| 41 | /// |
| 42 | /// An instance can be obtained via [`thread_rng`] or via `ThreadRng::default()`. |
| 43 | /// This handle is safe to use everywhere (including thread-local destructors), |
| 44 | /// though it is recommended not to use inside a fork handler. |
| 45 | /// The handle cannot be passed between threads (is not `Send` or `Sync`). |
| 46 | /// |
| 47 | /// `ThreadRng` uses the same PRNG as [`StdRng`] for security and performance |
| 48 | /// and is automatically seeded from [`OsRng`]. |
| 49 | /// |
| 50 | /// Unlike `StdRng`, `ThreadRng` uses the [`ReseedingRng`] wrapper to reseed |
| 51 | /// the PRNG from fresh entropy every 64 kiB of random data as well as after a |
| 52 | /// fork on Unix (though not quite immediately; see documentation of |
| 53 | /// [`ReseedingRng`]). |
| 54 | /// Note that the reseeding is done as an extra precaution against side-channel |
| 55 | /// attacks and mis-use (e.g. if somehow weak entropy were supplied initially). |
| 56 | /// The PRNG algorithms used are assumed to be secure. |
| 57 | /// |
| 58 | /// [`ReseedingRng`]: crate::rngs::adapter::ReseedingRng |
| 59 | /// [`StdRng`]: crate::rngs::StdRng |
| 60 | #[cfg_attr (doc_cfg, doc(cfg(all(feature = "std" , feature = "std_rng" ))))] |
| 61 | #[derive (Clone, Debug)] |
| 62 | pub struct ThreadRng { |
| 63 | // Rc is explicitly !Send and !Sync |
| 64 | rng: Rc<UnsafeCell<ReseedingRng<Core, OsRng>>>, |
| 65 | } |
| 66 | |
| 67 | thread_local!( |
| 68 | // We require Rc<..> to avoid premature freeing when thread_rng is used |
| 69 | // within thread-local destructors. See #968. |
| 70 | static THREAD_RNG_KEY: Rc<UnsafeCell<ReseedingRng<Core, OsRng>>> = { |
| 71 | let r = Core::from_rng(OsRng).unwrap_or_else(|err| |
| 72 | panic!("could not initialize thread_rng: {}" , err)); |
| 73 | let rng = ReseedingRng::new(r, |
| 74 | THREAD_RNG_RESEED_THRESHOLD, |
| 75 | OsRng); |
| 76 | Rc::new(UnsafeCell::new(rng)) |
| 77 | } |
| 78 | ); |
| 79 | |
| 80 | /// Retrieve the lazily-initialized thread-local random number generator, |
| 81 | /// seeded by the system. Intended to be used in method chaining style, |
| 82 | /// e.g. `thread_rng().gen::<i32>()`, or cached locally, e.g. |
| 83 | /// `let mut rng = thread_rng();`. Invoked by the `Default` trait, making |
| 84 | /// `ThreadRng::default()` equivalent. |
| 85 | /// |
| 86 | /// For more information see [`ThreadRng`]. |
| 87 | #[cfg_attr (doc_cfg, doc(cfg(all(feature = "std" , feature = "std_rng" ))))] |
| 88 | pub fn thread_rng() -> ThreadRng { |
| 89 | let rng: Rc>> = THREAD_RNG_KEY.with(|t: &Rc>>| t.clone()); |
| 90 | ThreadRng { rng } |
| 91 | } |
| 92 | |
| 93 | impl Default for ThreadRng { |
| 94 | fn default() -> ThreadRng { |
| 95 | crate::prelude::thread_rng() |
| 96 | } |
| 97 | } |
| 98 | |
| 99 | impl RngCore for ThreadRng { |
| 100 | #[inline (always)] |
| 101 | fn next_u32(&mut self) -> u32 { |
| 102 | // SAFETY: We must make sure to stop using `rng` before anyone else |
| 103 | // creates another mutable reference |
| 104 | let rng = unsafe { &mut *self.rng.get() }; |
| 105 | rng.next_u32() |
| 106 | } |
| 107 | |
| 108 | #[inline (always)] |
| 109 | fn next_u64(&mut self) -> u64 { |
| 110 | // SAFETY: We must make sure to stop using `rng` before anyone else |
| 111 | // creates another mutable reference |
| 112 | let rng = unsafe { &mut *self.rng.get() }; |
| 113 | rng.next_u64() |
| 114 | } |
| 115 | |
| 116 | fn fill_bytes(&mut self, dest: &mut [u8]) { |
| 117 | // SAFETY: We must make sure to stop using `rng` before anyone else |
| 118 | // creates another mutable reference |
| 119 | let rng = unsafe { &mut *self.rng.get() }; |
| 120 | rng.fill_bytes(dest) |
| 121 | } |
| 122 | |
| 123 | fn try_fill_bytes(&mut self, dest: &mut [u8]) -> Result<(), Error> { |
| 124 | // SAFETY: We must make sure to stop using `rng` before anyone else |
| 125 | // creates another mutable reference |
| 126 | let rng = unsafe { &mut *self.rng.get() }; |
| 127 | rng.try_fill_bytes(dest) |
| 128 | } |
| 129 | } |
| 130 | |
| 131 | impl CryptoRng for ThreadRng {} |
| 132 | |
| 133 | |
| 134 | #[cfg (test)] |
| 135 | mod test { |
| 136 | #[test ] |
| 137 | fn test_thread_rng() { |
| 138 | use crate::Rng; |
| 139 | let mut r = crate::thread_rng(); |
| 140 | r.gen::<i32>(); |
| 141 | assert_eq!(r.gen_range(0..1), 0); |
| 142 | } |
| 143 | } |
| 144 | |