1 | //===- llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h - Fatal error handling ------*- C++ -*-===// |
2 | // |
3 | // Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions. |
4 | // See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information. |
5 | // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception |
6 | // |
7 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
8 | // |
9 | // This file defines an API used to indicate fatal error conditions. Non-fatal |
10 | // errors (most of them) should be handled through LLVMContext. |
11 | // |
12 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
13 | |
14 | #ifndef LLVM_SUPPORT_ERRORHANDLING_H |
15 | #define LLVM_SUPPORT_ERRORHANDLING_H |
16 | |
17 | #include "llvm/Support/Compiler.h" |
18 | |
19 | namespace llvm { |
20 | class StringRef; |
21 | class Twine; |
22 | |
23 | /// An error handler callback. |
24 | typedef void (*fatal_error_handler_t)(void *user_data, |
25 | const char *reason, |
26 | bool gen_crash_diag); |
27 | |
28 | /// install_fatal_error_handler - Installs a new error handler to be used |
29 | /// whenever a serious (non-recoverable) error is encountered by LLVM. |
30 | /// |
31 | /// If no error handler is installed the default is to print the error message |
32 | /// to stderr, and call exit(1). If an error handler is installed then it is |
33 | /// the handler's responsibility to log the message, it will no longer be |
34 | /// printed to stderr. If the error handler returns, then exit(1) will be |
35 | /// called. |
36 | /// |
37 | /// It is dangerous to naively use an error handler which throws an exception. |
38 | /// Even though some applications desire to gracefully recover from arbitrary |
39 | /// faults, blindly throwing exceptions through unfamiliar code isn't a way to |
40 | /// achieve this. |
41 | /// |
42 | /// \param user_data - An argument which will be passed to the install error |
43 | /// handler. |
44 | void install_fatal_error_handler(fatal_error_handler_t handler, |
45 | void *user_data = nullptr); |
46 | |
47 | /// Restores default error handling behaviour. |
48 | void remove_fatal_error_handler(); |
49 | |
50 | /// ScopedFatalErrorHandler - This is a simple helper class which just |
51 | /// calls install_fatal_error_handler in its constructor and |
52 | /// remove_fatal_error_handler in its destructor. |
53 | struct ScopedFatalErrorHandler { |
54 | explicit ScopedFatalErrorHandler(fatal_error_handler_t handler, |
55 | void *user_data = nullptr) { |
56 | install_fatal_error_handler(handler, user_data); |
57 | } |
58 | |
59 | ~ScopedFatalErrorHandler() { remove_fatal_error_handler(); } |
60 | }; |
61 | |
62 | /// Reports a serious error, calling any installed error handler. These |
63 | /// functions are intended to be used for error conditions which are outside |
64 | /// the control of the compiler (I/O errors, invalid user input, etc.) |
65 | /// |
66 | /// If no error handler is installed the default is to print the message to |
67 | /// standard error, followed by a newline. |
68 | /// After the error handler is called this function will call abort(), it |
69 | /// does not return. |
70 | /// NOTE: The std::string variant was removed to avoid a <string> dependency. |
71 | [[noreturn]] void report_fatal_error(const char *reason, |
72 | bool gen_crash_diag = true); |
73 | [[noreturn]] void report_fatal_error(StringRef reason, |
74 | bool gen_crash_diag = true); |
75 | [[noreturn]] void report_fatal_error(const Twine &reason, |
76 | bool gen_crash_diag = true); |
77 | |
78 | /// Installs a new bad alloc error handler that should be used whenever a |
79 | /// bad alloc error, e.g. failing malloc/calloc, is encountered by LLVM. |
80 | /// |
81 | /// The user can install a bad alloc handler, in order to define the behavior |
82 | /// in case of failing allocations, e.g. throwing an exception. Note that this |
83 | /// handler must not trigger any additional allocations itself. |
84 | /// |
85 | /// If no error handler is installed the default is to print the error message |
86 | /// to stderr, and call exit(1). If an error handler is installed then it is |
87 | /// the handler's responsibility to log the message, it will no longer be |
88 | /// printed to stderr. If the error handler returns, then exit(1) will be |
89 | /// called. |
90 | /// |
91 | /// |
92 | /// \param user_data - An argument which will be passed to the installed error |
93 | /// handler. |
94 | void install_bad_alloc_error_handler(fatal_error_handler_t handler, |
95 | void *user_data = nullptr); |
96 | |
97 | /// Restores default bad alloc error handling behavior. |
98 | void remove_bad_alloc_error_handler(); |
99 | |
100 | void install_out_of_memory_new_handler(); |
101 | |
102 | /// Reports a bad alloc error, calling any user defined bad alloc |
103 | /// error handler. In contrast to the generic 'report_fatal_error' |
104 | /// functions, this function might not terminate, e.g. the user |
105 | /// defined error handler throws an exception, but it won't return. |
106 | /// |
107 | /// Note: When throwing an exception in the bad alloc handler, make sure that |
108 | /// the following unwind succeeds, e.g. do not trigger additional allocations |
109 | /// in the unwind chain. |
110 | /// |
111 | /// If no error handler is installed (default), throws a bad_alloc exception |
112 | /// if LLVM is compiled with exception support. Otherwise prints the error |
113 | /// to standard error and calls abort(). |
114 | [[noreturn]] void report_bad_alloc_error(const char *Reason, |
115 | bool GenCrashDiag = true); |
116 | |
117 | /// This function calls abort(), and prints the optional message to stderr. |
118 | /// Use the llvm_unreachable macro (that adds location info), instead of |
119 | /// calling this function directly. |
120 | [[noreturn]] void |
121 | llvm_unreachable_internal(const char *msg = nullptr, const char *file = nullptr, |
122 | unsigned line = 0); |
123 | } |
124 | |
125 | /// Marks that the current location is not supposed to be reachable. |
126 | /// In !NDEBUG builds, prints the message and location info to stderr. |
127 | /// In NDEBUG builds, if the platform does not support a builtin unreachable |
128 | /// then we call an internal LLVM runtime function. Otherwise the behavior is |
129 | /// controlled by the CMake flag |
130 | /// -DLLVM_UNREACHABLE_OPTIMIZE |
131 | /// * When "ON" (default) llvm_unreachable() becomes an optimizer hint |
132 | /// that the current location is not supposed to be reachable: the hint |
133 | /// turns such code path into undefined behavior. On compilers that don't |
134 | /// support such hints, prints a reduced message instead and aborts the |
135 | /// program. |
136 | /// * When "OFF", a builtin_trap is emitted instead of an |
137 | // optimizer hint or printing a reduced message. |
138 | /// |
139 | /// Use this instead of assert(0). It conveys intent more clearly, suppresses |
140 | /// diagnostics for unreachable code paths, and allows compilers to omit |
141 | /// unnecessary code. |
142 | #ifndef NDEBUG |
143 | #define llvm_unreachable(msg) \ |
144 | ::llvm::llvm_unreachable_internal(msg, __FILE__, __LINE__) |
145 | #elif !defined(LLVM_BUILTIN_UNREACHABLE) |
146 | #define llvm_unreachable(msg) ::llvm::llvm_unreachable_internal() |
147 | #elif LLVM_UNREACHABLE_OPTIMIZE |
148 | #define llvm_unreachable(msg) LLVM_BUILTIN_UNREACHABLE |
149 | #else |
150 | #define llvm_unreachable(msg) \ |
151 | do { \ |
152 | LLVM_BUILTIN_TRAP; \ |
153 | LLVM_BUILTIN_UNREACHABLE; \ |
154 | } while (false) |
155 | #endif |
156 | |
157 | #endif |
158 | |