From 698f8c2f01ea549d77d7dc3338a12e04c11057b9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 14:02:58 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.64.0+dfsg1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- library/std/src/panic.rs | 320 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 320 insertions(+) create mode 100644 library/std/src/panic.rs (limited to 'library/std/src/panic.rs') diff --git a/library/std/src/panic.rs b/library/std/src/panic.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..45bc56efb --- /dev/null +++ b/library/std/src/panic.rs @@ -0,0 +1,320 @@ +//! Panic support in the standard library. + +#![stable(feature = "std_panic", since = "1.9.0")] + +use crate::any::Any; +use crate::collections; +use crate::panicking; +use crate::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering}; +use crate::sync::{Mutex, RwLock}; +use crate::thread::Result; + +#[doc(hidden)] +#[unstable(feature = "edition_panic", issue = "none", reason = "use panic!() instead")] +#[allow_internal_unstable(libstd_sys_internals, const_format_args, core_panic, rt)] +#[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_diagnostic_item = "std_panic_2015_macro")] +#[rustc_macro_transparency = "semitransparent"] +pub macro panic_2015 { + () => ({ + $crate::rt::begin_panic("explicit panic") + }), + ($msg:expr $(,)?) => ({ + $crate::rt::begin_panic($msg) + }), + // Special-case the single-argument case for const_panic. + ("{}", $arg:expr $(,)?) => ({ + $crate::rt::panic_display(&$arg) + }), + ($fmt:expr, $($arg:tt)+) => ({ + $crate::rt::panic_fmt($crate::const_format_args!($fmt, $($arg)+)) + }), +} + +#[doc(hidden)] +#[unstable(feature = "edition_panic", issue = "none", reason = "use panic!() instead")] +pub use core::panic::panic_2021; + +#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] +pub use crate::panicking::{set_hook, take_hook}; + +#[unstable(feature = "panic_update_hook", issue = "92649")] +pub use crate::panicking::update_hook; + +#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] +pub use core::panic::{Location, PanicInfo}; + +#[stable(feature = "catch_unwind", since = "1.9.0")] +pub use core::panic::{AssertUnwindSafe, RefUnwindSafe, UnwindSafe}; + +/// Panic the current thread with the given message as the panic payload. +/// +/// The message can be of any (`Any + Send`) type, not just strings. +/// +/// The message is wrapped in a `Box<'static + Any + Send>`, which can be +/// accessed later using [`PanicInfo::payload`]. +/// +/// See the [`panic!`] macro for more information about panicking. +#[stable(feature = "panic_any", since = "1.51.0")] +#[inline] +#[track_caller] +pub fn panic_any(msg: M) -> ! { + crate::panicking::begin_panic(msg); +} + +#[stable(feature = "catch_unwind", since = "1.9.0")] +impl UnwindSafe for Mutex {} +#[stable(feature = "catch_unwind", since = "1.9.0")] +impl UnwindSafe for RwLock {} + +#[stable(feature = "unwind_safe_lock_refs", since = "1.12.0")] +impl RefUnwindSafe for Mutex {} +#[stable(feature = "unwind_safe_lock_refs", since = "1.12.0")] +impl RefUnwindSafe for RwLock {} + +// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/62301 +#[stable(feature = "hashbrown", since = "1.36.0")] +impl UnwindSafe for collections::HashMap +where + K: UnwindSafe, + V: UnwindSafe, + S: UnwindSafe, +{ +} + +/// Invokes a closure, capturing the cause of an unwinding panic if one occurs. +/// +/// This function will return `Ok` with the closure's result if the closure +/// does not panic, and will return `Err(cause)` if the closure panics. The +/// `cause` returned is the object with which panic was originally invoked. +/// +/// It is currently undefined behavior to unwind from Rust code into foreign +/// code, so this function is particularly useful when Rust is called from +/// another language (normally C). This can run arbitrary Rust code, capturing a +/// panic and allowing a graceful handling of the error. +/// +/// It is **not** recommended to use this function for a general try/catch +/// mechanism. The [`Result`] type is more appropriate to use for functions that +/// can fail on a regular basis. Additionally, this function is not guaranteed +/// to catch all panics, see the "Notes" section below. +/// +/// The closure provided is required to adhere to the [`UnwindSafe`] trait to ensure +/// that all captured variables are safe to cross this boundary. The purpose of +/// this bound is to encode the concept of [exception safety][rfc] in the type +/// system. Most usage of this function should not need to worry about this +/// bound as programs are naturally unwind safe without `unsafe` code. If it +/// becomes a problem the [`AssertUnwindSafe`] wrapper struct can be used to quickly +/// assert that the usage here is indeed unwind safe. +/// +/// [rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1236-stabilize-catch-panic.md +/// +/// # Notes +/// +/// Note that this function **might not catch all panics** in Rust. A panic in +/// Rust is not always implemented via unwinding, but can be implemented by +/// aborting the process as well. This function *only* catches unwinding panics, +/// not those that abort the process. +/// +/// Also note that unwinding into Rust code with a foreign exception (e.g. +/// an exception thrown from C++ code) is undefined behavior. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ``` +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// let result = panic::catch_unwind(|| { +/// println!("hello!"); +/// }); +/// assert!(result.is_ok()); +/// +/// let result = panic::catch_unwind(|| { +/// panic!("oh no!"); +/// }); +/// assert!(result.is_err()); +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "catch_unwind", since = "1.9.0")] +pub fn catch_unwind R + UnwindSafe, R>(f: F) -> Result { + unsafe { panicking::r#try(f) } +} + +/// Triggers a panic without invoking the panic hook. +/// +/// This is designed to be used in conjunction with [`catch_unwind`] to, for +/// example, carry a panic across a layer of C code. +/// +/// # Notes +/// +/// Note that panics in Rust are not always implemented via unwinding, but they +/// may be implemented by aborting the process. If this function is called when +/// panics are implemented this way then this function will abort the process, +/// not trigger an unwind. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// ```should_panic +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// let result = panic::catch_unwind(|| { +/// panic!("oh no!"); +/// }); +/// +/// if let Err(err) = result { +/// panic::resume_unwind(err); +/// } +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "resume_unwind", since = "1.9.0")] +pub fn resume_unwind(payload: Box) -> ! { + panicking::rust_panic_without_hook(payload) +} + +/// Make all future panics abort directly without running the panic hook or unwinding. +/// +/// There is no way to undo this; the effect lasts until the process exits or +/// execs (or the equivalent). +/// +/// # Use after fork +/// +/// This function is particularly useful for calling after `libc::fork`. After `fork`, in a +/// multithreaded program it is (on many platforms) not safe to call the allocator. It is also +/// generally highly undesirable for an unwind to unwind past the `fork`, because that results in +/// the unwind propagating to code that was only ever expecting to run in the parent. +/// +/// `panic::always_abort()` helps avoid both of these. It directly avoids any further unwinding, +/// and if there is a panic, the abort will occur without allocating provided that the arguments to +/// panic can be formatted without allocating. +/// +/// Examples +/// +/// ```no_run +/// #![feature(panic_always_abort)] +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// panic::always_abort(); +/// +/// let _ = panic::catch_unwind(|| { +/// panic!("inside the catch"); +/// }); +/// +/// // We will have aborted already, due to the panic. +/// unreachable!(); +/// ``` +#[unstable(feature = "panic_always_abort", issue = "84438")] +pub fn always_abort() { + crate::panicking::panic_count::set_always_abort(); +} + +/// The configuration for whether and how the default panic hook will capture +/// and display the backtrace. +#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)] +#[unstable(feature = "panic_backtrace_config", issue = "93346")] +#[non_exhaustive] +pub enum BacktraceStyle { + /// Prints a terser backtrace which ideally only contains relevant + /// information. + Short, + /// Prints a backtrace with all possible information. + Full, + /// Disable collecting and displaying backtraces. + Off, +} + +impl BacktraceStyle { + pub(crate) fn full() -> Option { + if cfg!(feature = "backtrace") { Some(BacktraceStyle::Full) } else { None } + } + + fn as_usize(self) -> usize { + match self { + BacktraceStyle::Short => 1, + BacktraceStyle::Full => 2, + BacktraceStyle::Off => 3, + } + } + + fn from_usize(s: usize) -> Option { + Some(match s { + 0 => return None, + 1 => BacktraceStyle::Short, + 2 => BacktraceStyle::Full, + 3 => BacktraceStyle::Off, + _ => unreachable!(), + }) + } +} + +// Tracks whether we should/can capture a backtrace, and how we should display +// that backtrace. +// +// Internally stores equivalent of an Option. +static SHOULD_CAPTURE: AtomicUsize = AtomicUsize::new(0); + +/// Configure whether the default panic hook will capture and display a +/// backtrace. +/// +/// The default value for this setting may be set by the `RUST_BACKTRACE` +/// environment variable; see the details in [`get_backtrace_style`]. +#[unstable(feature = "panic_backtrace_config", issue = "93346")] +pub fn set_backtrace_style(style: BacktraceStyle) { + if !cfg!(feature = "backtrace") { + // If the `backtrace` feature of this crate isn't enabled, skip setting. + return; + } + SHOULD_CAPTURE.store(style.as_usize(), Ordering::Release); +} + +/// Checks whether the standard library's panic hook will capture and print a +/// backtrace. +/// +/// This function will, if a backtrace style has not been set via +/// [`set_backtrace_style`], read the environment variable `RUST_BACKTRACE` to +/// determine a default value for the backtrace formatting: +/// +/// The first call to `get_backtrace_style` may read the `RUST_BACKTRACE` +/// environment variable if `set_backtrace_style` has not been called to +/// override the default value. After a call to `set_backtrace_style` or +/// `get_backtrace_style`, any changes to `RUST_BACKTRACE` will have no effect. +/// +/// `RUST_BACKTRACE` is read according to these rules: +/// +/// * `0` for `BacktraceStyle::Off` +/// * `full` for `BacktraceStyle::Full` +/// * `1` for `BacktraceStyle::Short` +/// * Other values are currently `BacktraceStyle::Short`, but this may change in +/// the future +/// +/// Returns `None` if backtraces aren't currently supported. +#[unstable(feature = "panic_backtrace_config", issue = "93346")] +pub fn get_backtrace_style() -> Option { + if !cfg!(feature = "backtrace") { + // If the `backtrace` feature of this crate isn't enabled quickly return + // `Unsupported` so this can be constant propagated all over the place + // to optimize away callers. + return None; + } + if let Some(style) = BacktraceStyle::from_usize(SHOULD_CAPTURE.load(Ordering::Acquire)) { + return Some(style); + } + + // Setting environment variables for Fuchsia components isn't a standard + // or easily supported workflow. For now, display backtraces by default. + let format = if cfg!(target_os = "fuchsia") { + BacktraceStyle::Full + } else { + crate::env::var_os("RUST_BACKTRACE") + .map(|x| { + if &x == "0" { + BacktraceStyle::Off + } else if &x == "full" { + BacktraceStyle::Full + } else { + BacktraceStyle::Short + } + }) + .unwrap_or(BacktraceStyle::Off) + }; + set_backtrace_style(format); + Some(format) +} + +#[cfg(test)] +mod tests; -- cgit v1.2.3