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/panicking.rs | 749 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 749 insertions(+) create mode 100644 library/std/src/panicking.rs (limited to 'library/std/src/panicking.rs') diff --git a/library/std/src/panicking.rs b/library/std/src/panicking.rs new file mode 100644 index 000000000..25c9201f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/library/std/src/panicking.rs @@ -0,0 +1,749 @@ +//! Implementation of various bits and pieces of the `panic!` macro and +//! associated runtime pieces. +//! +//! Specifically, this module contains the implementation of: +//! +//! * Panic hooks +//! * Executing a panic up to doing the actual implementation +//! * Shims around "try" + +#![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] + +use crate::panic::BacktraceStyle; +use core::panic::{BoxMeUp, Location, PanicInfo}; + +use crate::any::Any; +use crate::fmt; +use crate::intrinsics; +use crate::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop}; +use crate::process; +use crate::sync::atomic::{AtomicBool, Ordering}; +use crate::sys::stdio::panic_output; +use crate::sys_common::backtrace; +use crate::sys_common::rwlock::StaticRwLock; +use crate::sys_common::thread_info; +use crate::thread; + +#[cfg(not(test))] +use crate::io::set_output_capture; +// make sure to use the stderr output configured +// by libtest in the real copy of std +#[cfg(test)] +use realstd::io::set_output_capture; + +// Binary interface to the panic runtime that the standard library depends on. +// +// The standard library is tagged with `#![needs_panic_runtime]` (introduced in +// RFC 1513) to indicate that it requires some other crate tagged with +// `#![panic_runtime]` to exist somewhere. Each panic runtime is intended to +// implement these symbols (with the same signatures) so we can get matched up +// to them. +// +// One day this may look a little less ad-hoc with the compiler helping out to +// hook up these functions, but it is not this day! +#[allow(improper_ctypes)] +extern "C" { + fn __rust_panic_cleanup(payload: *mut u8) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send + 'static); +} + +#[allow(improper_ctypes)] +extern "Rust" { + /// `payload` is passed through another layer of raw pointers as `&mut dyn Trait` is not + /// FFI-safe. `BoxMeUp` lazily performs allocation only when needed (this avoids allocations + /// when using the "abort" panic runtime). + fn __rust_start_panic(payload: *mut &mut dyn BoxMeUp) -> u32; +} + +/// This function is called by the panic runtime if FFI code catches a Rust +/// panic but doesn't rethrow it. We don't support this case since it messes +/// with our panic count. +#[cfg(not(test))] +#[rustc_std_internal_symbol] +extern "C" fn __rust_drop_panic() -> ! { + rtabort!("Rust panics must be rethrown"); +} + +/// This function is called by the panic runtime if it catches an exception +/// object which does not correspond to a Rust panic. +#[cfg(not(test))] +#[rustc_std_internal_symbol] +extern "C" fn __rust_foreign_exception() -> ! { + rtabort!("Rust cannot catch foreign exceptions"); +} + +#[derive(Copy, Clone)] +enum Hook { + Default, + Custom(*mut (dyn Fn(&PanicInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send)), +} + +impl Hook { + fn custom(f: impl Fn(&PanicInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send) -> Self { + Self::Custom(Box::into_raw(Box::new(f))) + } +} + +static HOOK_LOCK: StaticRwLock = StaticRwLock::new(); +static mut HOOK: Hook = Hook::Default; + +/// Registers a custom panic hook, replacing any that was previously registered. +/// +/// The panic hook is invoked when a thread panics, but before the panic runtime +/// is invoked. As such, the hook will run with both the aborting and unwinding +/// runtimes. The default hook prints a message to standard error and generates +/// a backtrace if requested, but this behavior can be customized with the +/// `set_hook` and [`take_hook`] functions. +/// +/// [`take_hook`]: ./fn.take_hook.html +/// +/// The hook is provided with a `PanicInfo` struct which contains information +/// about the origin of the panic, including the payload passed to `panic!` and +/// the source code location from which the panic originated. +/// +/// The panic hook is a global resource. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// Panics if called from a panicking thread. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// The following will print "Custom panic hook": +/// +/// ```should_panic +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| { +/// println!("Custom panic hook"); +/// })); +/// +/// panic!("Normal panic"); +/// ``` +#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] +pub fn set_hook(hook: Box) + 'static + Sync + Send>) { + if thread::panicking() { + panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); + } + + // SAFETY: + // + // - `HOOK` can only be modified while holding write access to `HOOK_LOCK`. + // - The argument of `Box::from_raw` is always a valid pointer that was created using + // `Box::into_raw`. + unsafe { + let guard = HOOK_LOCK.write(); + let old_hook = HOOK; + HOOK = Hook::Custom(Box::into_raw(hook)); + drop(guard); + + if let Hook::Custom(ptr) = old_hook { + #[allow(unused_must_use)] + { + Box::from_raw(ptr); + } + } + } +} + +/// Unregisters the current panic hook, returning it. +/// +/// *See also the function [`set_hook`].* +/// +/// [`set_hook`]: ./fn.set_hook.html +/// +/// If no custom hook is registered, the default hook will be returned. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// Panics if called from a panicking thread. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// The following will print "Normal panic": +/// +/// ```should_panic +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| { +/// println!("Custom panic hook"); +/// })); +/// +/// let _ = panic::take_hook(); +/// +/// panic!("Normal panic"); +/// ``` +#[must_use] +#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] +pub fn take_hook() -> Box) + 'static + Sync + Send> { + if thread::panicking() { + panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); + } + + // SAFETY: + // + // - `HOOK` can only be modified while holding write access to `HOOK_LOCK`. + // - The argument of `Box::from_raw` is always a valid pointer that was created using + // `Box::into_raw`. + unsafe { + let guard = HOOK_LOCK.write(); + let hook = HOOK; + HOOK = Hook::Default; + drop(guard); + + match hook { + Hook::Default => Box::new(default_hook), + Hook::Custom(ptr) => Box::from_raw(ptr), + } + } +} + +/// Atomic combination of [`take_hook`] and [`set_hook`]. Use this to replace the panic handler with +/// a new panic handler that does something and then executes the old handler. +/// +/// [`take_hook`]: ./fn.take_hook.html +/// [`set_hook`]: ./fn.set_hook.html +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// Panics if called from a panicking thread. +/// +/// # Examples +/// +/// The following will print the custom message, and then the normal output of panic. +/// +/// ```should_panic +/// #![feature(panic_update_hook)] +/// use std::panic; +/// +/// // Equivalent to +/// // let prev = panic::take_hook(); +/// // panic::set_hook(move |info| { +/// // println!("..."); +/// // prev(info); +/// // ); +/// panic::update_hook(move |prev, info| { +/// println!("Print custom message and execute panic handler as usual"); +/// prev(info); +/// }); +/// +/// panic!("Custom and then normal"); +/// ``` +#[unstable(feature = "panic_update_hook", issue = "92649")] +pub fn update_hook(hook_fn: F) +where + F: Fn(&(dyn Fn(&PanicInfo<'_>) + Send + Sync + 'static), &PanicInfo<'_>) + + Sync + + Send + + 'static, +{ + if thread::panicking() { + panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); + } + + // SAFETY: + // + // - `HOOK` can only be modified while holding write access to `HOOK_LOCK`. + // - The argument of `Box::from_raw` is always a valid pointer that was created using + // `Box::into_raw`. + unsafe { + let guard = HOOK_LOCK.write(); + let old_hook = HOOK; + HOOK = Hook::Default; + + let prev = match old_hook { + Hook::Default => Box::new(default_hook), + Hook::Custom(ptr) => Box::from_raw(ptr), + }; + + HOOK = Hook::custom(move |info| hook_fn(&prev, info)); + drop(guard); + } +} + +fn default_hook(info: &PanicInfo<'_>) { + // If this is a double panic, make sure that we print a backtrace + // for this panic. Otherwise only print it if logging is enabled. + let backtrace = if panic_count::get_count() >= 2 { + BacktraceStyle::full() + } else { + crate::panic::get_backtrace_style() + }; + + // The current implementation always returns `Some`. + let location = info.location().unwrap(); + + let msg = match info.payload().downcast_ref::<&'static str>() { + Some(s) => *s, + None => match info.payload().downcast_ref::() { + Some(s) => &s[..], + None => "Box", + }, + }; + let thread = thread_info::current_thread(); + let name = thread.as_ref().and_then(|t| t.name()).unwrap_or(""); + + let write = |err: &mut dyn crate::io::Write| { + let _ = writeln!(err, "thread '{name}' panicked at '{msg}', {location}"); + + static FIRST_PANIC: AtomicBool = AtomicBool::new(true); + + match backtrace { + Some(BacktraceStyle::Short) => { + drop(backtrace::print(err, crate::backtrace_rs::PrintFmt::Short)) + } + Some(BacktraceStyle::Full) => { + drop(backtrace::print(err, crate::backtrace_rs::PrintFmt::Full)) + } + Some(BacktraceStyle::Off) => { + if FIRST_PANIC.swap(false, Ordering::SeqCst) { + let _ = writeln!( + err, + "note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace" + ); + } + } + // If backtraces aren't supported, do nothing. + None => {} + } + }; + + if let Some(local) = set_output_capture(None) { + write(&mut *local.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner())); + set_output_capture(Some(local)); + } else if let Some(mut out) = panic_output() { + write(&mut out); + } +} + +#[cfg(not(test))] +#[doc(hidden)] +#[unstable(feature = "update_panic_count", issue = "none")] +pub mod panic_count { + use crate::cell::Cell; + use crate::sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering}; + + pub const ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG: usize = 1 << (usize::BITS - 1); + + // Panic count for the current thread. + thread_local! { static LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT: Cell = const { Cell::new(0) } } + + // Sum of panic counts from all threads. The purpose of this is to have + // a fast path in `is_zero` (which is used by `panicking`). In any particular + // thread, if that thread currently views `GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT` as being zero, + // then `LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT` in that thread is zero. This invariant holds before + // and after increase and decrease, but not necessarily during their execution. + // + // Additionally, the top bit of GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT (GLOBAL_ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG) + // records whether panic::always_abort() has been called. This can only be + // set, never cleared. + // + // This could be viewed as a struct containing a single bit and an n-1-bit + // value, but if we wrote it like that it would be more than a single word, + // and even a newtype around usize would be clumsy because we need atomics. + // But we use such a tuple for the return type of increase(). + // + // Stealing a bit is fine because it just amounts to assuming that each + // panicking thread consumes at least 2 bytes of address space. + static GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT: AtomicUsize = AtomicUsize::new(0); + + pub fn increase() -> (bool, usize) { + ( + GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_add(1, Ordering::Relaxed) & ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG != 0, + LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| { + let next = c.get() + 1; + c.set(next); + next + }), + ) + } + + pub fn decrease() { + GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_sub(1, Ordering::Relaxed); + LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| { + let next = c.get() - 1; + c.set(next); + next + }); + } + + pub fn set_always_abort() { + GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_or(ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG, Ordering::Relaxed); + } + + // Disregards ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG + #[must_use] + pub fn get_count() -> usize { + LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| c.get()) + } + + // Disregards ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG + #[must_use] + #[inline] + pub fn count_is_zero() -> bool { + if GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.load(Ordering::Relaxed) & !ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG == 0 { + // Fast path: if `GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT` is zero, all threads + // (including the current one) will have `LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT` + // equal to zero, so TLS access can be avoided. + // + // In terms of performance, a relaxed atomic load is similar to a normal + // aligned memory read (e.g., a mov instruction in x86), but with some + // compiler optimization restrictions. On the other hand, a TLS access + // might require calling a non-inlinable function (such as `__tls_get_addr` + // when using the GD TLS model). + true + } else { + is_zero_slow_path() + } + } + + // Slow path is in a separate function to reduce the amount of code + // inlined from `is_zero`. + #[inline(never)] + #[cold] + fn is_zero_slow_path() -> bool { + LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| c.get() == 0) + } +} + +#[cfg(test)] +pub use realstd::rt::panic_count; + +/// Invoke a closure, capturing the cause of an unwinding panic if one occurs. +pub unsafe fn r#try R>(f: F) -> Result> { + union Data { + f: ManuallyDrop, + r: ManuallyDrop, + p: ManuallyDrop>, + } + + // We do some sketchy operations with ownership here for the sake of + // performance. We can only pass pointers down to `do_call` (can't pass + // objects by value), so we do all the ownership tracking here manually + // using a union. + // + // We go through a transition where: + // + // * First, we set the data field `f` to be the argumentless closure that we're going to call. + // * When we make the function call, the `do_call` function below, we take + // ownership of the function pointer. At this point the `data` union is + // entirely uninitialized. + // * If the closure successfully returns, we write the return value into the + // data's return slot (field `r`). + // * If the closure panics (`do_catch` below), we write the panic payload into field `p`. + // * Finally, when we come back out of the `try` intrinsic we're + // in one of two states: + // + // 1. The closure didn't panic, in which case the return value was + // filled in. We move it out of `data.r` and return it. + // 2. The closure panicked, in which case the panic payload was + // filled in. We move it out of `data.p` and return it. + // + // Once we stack all that together we should have the "most efficient' + // method of calling a catch panic whilst juggling ownership. + let mut data = Data { f: ManuallyDrop::new(f) }; + + let data_ptr = &mut data as *mut _ as *mut u8; + // SAFETY: + // + // Access to the union's fields: this is `std` and we know that the `r#try` + // intrinsic fills in the `r` or `p` union field based on its return value. + // + // The call to `intrinsics::r#try` is made safe by: + // - `do_call`, the first argument, can be called with the initial `data_ptr`. + // - `do_catch`, the second argument, can be called with the `data_ptr` as well. + // See their safety preconditions for more information + unsafe { + return if intrinsics::r#try(do_call::, data_ptr, do_catch::) == 0 { + Ok(ManuallyDrop::into_inner(data.r)) + } else { + Err(ManuallyDrop::into_inner(data.p)) + }; + } + + // We consider unwinding to be rare, so mark this function as cold. However, + // do not mark it no-inline -- that decision is best to leave to the + // optimizer (in most cases this function is not inlined even as a normal, + // non-cold function, though, as of the writing of this comment). + #[cold] + unsafe fn cleanup(payload: *mut u8) -> Box { + // SAFETY: The whole unsafe block hinges on a correct implementation of + // the panic handler `__rust_panic_cleanup`. As such we can only + // assume it returns the correct thing for `Box::from_raw` to work + // without undefined behavior. + let obj = unsafe { Box::from_raw(__rust_panic_cleanup(payload)) }; + panic_count::decrease(); + obj + } + + // SAFETY: + // data must be non-NUL, correctly aligned, and a pointer to a `Data` + // Its must contains a valid `f` (type: F) value that can be use to fill + // `data.r`. + // + // This function cannot be marked as `unsafe` because `intrinsics::r#try` + // expects normal function pointers. + #[inline] + fn do_call R, R>(data: *mut u8) { + // SAFETY: this is the responsibility of the caller, see above. + unsafe { + let data = data as *mut Data; + let data = &mut (*data); + let f = ManuallyDrop::take(&mut data.f); + data.r = ManuallyDrop::new(f()); + } + } + + // We *do* want this part of the catch to be inlined: this allows the + // compiler to properly track accesses to the Data union and optimize it + // away most of the time. + // + // SAFETY: + // data must be non-NUL, correctly aligned, and a pointer to a `Data` + // Since this uses `cleanup` it also hinges on a correct implementation of + // `__rustc_panic_cleanup`. + // + // This function cannot be marked as `unsafe` because `intrinsics::r#try` + // expects normal function pointers. + #[inline] + fn do_catch R, R>(data: *mut u8, payload: *mut u8) { + // SAFETY: this is the responsibility of the caller, see above. + // + // When `__rustc_panic_cleaner` is correctly implemented we can rely + // on `obj` being the correct thing to pass to `data.p` (after wrapping + // in `ManuallyDrop`). + unsafe { + let data = data as *mut Data; + let data = &mut (*data); + let obj = cleanup(payload); + data.p = ManuallyDrop::new(obj); + } + } +} + +/// Determines whether the current thread is unwinding because of panic. +#[inline] +pub fn panicking() -> bool { + !panic_count::count_is_zero() +} + +/// Entry point of panics from the libcore crate (`panic_impl` lang item). +#[cfg(not(test))] +#[panic_handler] +pub fn begin_panic_handler(info: &PanicInfo<'_>) -> ! { + struct PanicPayload<'a> { + inner: &'a fmt::Arguments<'a>, + string: Option, + } + + impl<'a> PanicPayload<'a> { + fn new(inner: &'a fmt::Arguments<'a>) -> PanicPayload<'a> { + PanicPayload { inner, string: None } + } + + fn fill(&mut self) -> &mut String { + use crate::fmt::Write; + + let inner = self.inner; + // Lazily, the first time this gets called, run the actual string formatting. + self.string.get_or_insert_with(|| { + let mut s = String::new(); + drop(s.write_fmt(*inner)); + s + }) + } + } + + unsafe impl<'a> BoxMeUp for PanicPayload<'a> { + fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { + // We do two allocations here, unfortunately. But (a) they're required with the current + // scheme, and (b) we don't handle panic + OOM properly anyway (see comment in + // begin_panic below). + let contents = mem::take(self.fill()); + Box::into_raw(Box::new(contents)) + } + + fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { + self.fill() + } + } + + struct StrPanicPayload(&'static str); + + unsafe impl BoxMeUp for StrPanicPayload { + fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { + Box::into_raw(Box::new(self.0)) + } + + fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { + &self.0 + } + } + + let loc = info.location().unwrap(); // The current implementation always returns Some + let msg = info.message().unwrap(); // The current implementation always returns Some + crate::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace(move || { + if let Some(msg) = msg.as_str() { + rust_panic_with_hook(&mut StrPanicPayload(msg), info.message(), loc, info.can_unwind()); + } else { + rust_panic_with_hook( + &mut PanicPayload::new(msg), + info.message(), + loc, + info.can_unwind(), + ); + } + }) +} + +/// This is the entry point of panicking for the non-format-string variants of +/// panic!() and assert!(). In particular, this is the only entry point that supports +/// arbitrary payloads, not just format strings. +#[unstable(feature = "libstd_sys_internals", reason = "used by the panic! macro", issue = "none")] +#[cfg_attr(not(test), lang = "begin_panic")] +// lang item for CTFE panic support +// never inline unless panic_immediate_abort to avoid code +// bloat at the call sites as much as possible +#[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never))] +#[cold] +#[track_caller] +#[rustc_do_not_const_check] // hooked by const-eval +pub const fn begin_panic(msg: M) -> ! { + if cfg!(feature = "panic_immediate_abort") { + intrinsics::abort() + } + + let loc = Location::caller(); + return crate::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace(move || { + rust_panic_with_hook(&mut PanicPayload::new(msg), None, loc, true) + }); + + struct PanicPayload { + inner: Option, + } + + impl PanicPayload { + fn new(inner: A) -> PanicPayload { + PanicPayload { inner: Some(inner) } + } + } + + unsafe impl BoxMeUp for PanicPayload { + fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { + // Note that this should be the only allocation performed in this code path. Currently + // this means that panic!() on OOM will invoke this code path, but then again we're not + // really ready for panic on OOM anyway. If we do start doing this, then we should + // propagate this allocation to be performed in the parent of this thread instead of the + // thread that's panicking. + let data = match self.inner.take() { + Some(a) => Box::new(a) as Box, + None => process::abort(), + }; + Box::into_raw(data) + } + + fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { + match self.inner { + Some(ref a) => a, + None => process::abort(), + } + } + } +} + +/// Central point for dispatching panics. +/// +/// Executes the primary logic for a panic, including checking for recursive +/// panics, panic hooks, and finally dispatching to the panic runtime to either +/// abort or unwind. +fn rust_panic_with_hook( + payload: &mut dyn BoxMeUp, + message: Option<&fmt::Arguments<'_>>, + location: &Location<'_>, + can_unwind: bool, +) -> ! { + let (must_abort, panics) = panic_count::increase(); + + // If this is the third nested call (e.g., panics == 2, this is 0-indexed), + // the panic hook probably triggered the last panic, otherwise the + // double-panic check would have aborted the process. In this case abort the + // process real quickly as we don't want to try calling it again as it'll + // probably just panic again. + if must_abort || panics > 2 { + if panics > 2 { + // Don't try to print the message in this case + // - perhaps that is causing the recursive panics. + rtprintpanic!("thread panicked while processing panic. aborting.\n"); + } else { + // Unfortunately, this does not print a backtrace, because creating + // a `Backtrace` will allocate, which we must to avoid here. + let panicinfo = PanicInfo::internal_constructor(message, location, can_unwind); + rtprintpanic!("{panicinfo}\npanicked after panic::always_abort(), aborting.\n"); + } + crate::sys::abort_internal(); + } + + unsafe { + let mut info = PanicInfo::internal_constructor(message, location, can_unwind); + let _guard = HOOK_LOCK.read(); + match HOOK { + // Some platforms (like wasm) know that printing to stderr won't ever actually + // print anything, and if that's the case we can skip the default + // hook. Since string formatting happens lazily when calling `payload` + // methods, this means we avoid formatting the string at all! + // (The panic runtime might still call `payload.take_box()` though and trigger + // formatting.) + Hook::Default if panic_output().is_none() => {} + Hook::Default => { + info.set_payload(payload.get()); + default_hook(&info); + } + Hook::Custom(ptr) => { + info.set_payload(payload.get()); + (*ptr)(&info); + } + }; + } + + if panics > 1 || !can_unwind { + // If a thread panics while it's already unwinding then we + // have limited options. Currently our preference is to + // just abort. In the future we may consider resuming + // unwinding or otherwise exiting the thread cleanly. + rtprintpanic!("thread panicked while panicking. aborting.\n"); + crate::sys::abort_internal(); + } + + rust_panic(payload) +} + +/// This is the entry point for `resume_unwind`. +/// It just forwards the payload to the panic runtime. +pub fn rust_panic_without_hook(payload: Box) -> ! { + panic_count::increase(); + + struct RewrapBox(Box); + + unsafe impl BoxMeUp for RewrapBox { + fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { + Box::into_raw(mem::replace(&mut self.0, Box::new(()))) + } + + fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { + &*self.0 + } + } + + rust_panic(&mut RewrapBox(payload)) +} + +/// An unmangled function (through `rustc_std_internal_symbol`) on which to slap +/// yer breakpoints. +#[inline(never)] +#[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_std_internal_symbol)] +fn rust_panic(mut msg: &mut dyn BoxMeUp) -> ! { + let code = unsafe { + let obj = &mut msg as *mut &mut dyn BoxMeUp; + __rust_start_panic(obj) + }; + rtabort!("failed to initiate panic, error {code}") +} -- cgit v1.2.3