//! Panic support for libcore //! //! The core library cannot define panicking, but it does *declare* panicking. This //! means that the functions inside of libcore are allowed to panic, but to be //! useful an upstream crate must define panicking for libcore to use. The current //! interface for panicking is: //! //! ``` //! # use std::fmt; //! fn panic_impl(fmt: fmt::Arguments, file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! //! # { loop {} } //! ``` //! //! This definition allows for panicking with any general message, but it does not //! allow for failing with a `Box` value. The reason for this is that libcore //! is not allowed to allocate. //! //! This module contains a few other panicking functions, but these are just the //! necessary lang items for the compiler. All panics are funneled through this //! one function. Currently, the actual symbol is declared in the standard //! library, but the location of this may change over time. #![allow(dead_code, missing_docs)] #![unstable(feature = "core_panic", reason = "internal details of the implementation of the `panic!` \ and related macros", issue = "0")] use fmt; use panic::{Location, PanicInfo}; #[cold] // 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))] #[lang = "panic"] pub fn panic(expr_file_line_col: &(&'static str, &'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! { if cfg!(feature = "panic_immediate_abort") { unsafe { super::intrinsics::abort() } } // Use Arguments::new_v1 instead of format_args!("{}", expr) to potentially // reduce size overhead. The format_args! macro uses str's Display trait to // write expr, which calls Formatter::pad, which must accommodate string // truncation and padding (even though none is used here). Using // Arguments::new_v1 may allow the compiler to omit Formatter::pad from the // output binary, saving up to a few kilobytes. let (expr, file, line, col) = *expr_file_line_col; panic_fmt(fmt::Arguments::new_v1(&[expr], &[]), &(file, line, col)) } #[cold] #[cfg_attr(not(feature="panic_immediate_abort"),inline(never))] #[lang = "panic_bounds_check"] fn panic_bounds_check(file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32), index: usize, len: usize) -> ! { if cfg!(feature = "panic_immediate_abort") { unsafe { super::intrinsics::abort() } } panic_fmt(format_args!("index out of bounds: the len is {} but the index is {}", len, index), file_line_col) } #[cold] #[cfg_attr(not(feature="panic_immediate_abort"),inline(never))] #[cfg_attr( feature="panic_immediate_abort" ,inline)] pub fn panic_fmt(fmt: fmt::Arguments, file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! { if cfg!(feature = "panic_immediate_abort") { unsafe { super::intrinsics::abort() } } // NOTE This function never crosses the FFI boundary; it's a Rust-to-Rust call #[allow(improper_ctypes)] // PanicInfo contains a trait object which is not FFI safe extern "Rust" { #[lang = "panic_impl"] fn panic_impl(pi: &PanicInfo) -> !; } let (file, line, col) = *file_line_col; let pi = PanicInfo::internal_constructor( Some(&fmt), Location::internal_constructor(file, line, col), ); unsafe { panic_impl(&pi) } }