mirror of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.git
synced 2026-05-28 20:16:58 +03:00
c3a5d6b130
This commit applies a few code size optimizations for the wasm target to the standard library, namely around panics. We notably know that in most configurations it's impossible for us to print anything in wasm32-unknown-unknown so we can skip larger portions of panicking that are otherwise simply informative. This allows us to get quite a nice size reduction. Finally we can also tweak where the allocation happens for the `Box<Any>` that we panic with. By only allocating once unwinding starts we can reduce the size of a panicking wasm module from 44k to 350 bytes.
481 lines
15 KiB
Rust
481 lines
15 KiB
Rust
// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
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// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
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// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
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// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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//! Implementation of various bits and pieces of the `panic!` macro and
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//! associated runtime pieces.
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//!
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//! Specifically, this module contains the implementation of:
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//!
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//! * Panic hooks
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//! * Executing a panic up to doing the actual implementation
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//! * Shims around "try"
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use core::panic::BoxMeUp;
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use io::prelude::*;
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use any::Any;
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use cell::RefCell;
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use core::panic::{PanicInfo, Location};
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use fmt;
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use intrinsics;
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use mem;
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use ptr;
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use raw;
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use sys::stdio::{Stderr, stderr_prints_nothing};
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use sys_common::rwlock::RWLock;
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use sys_common::thread_info;
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use sys_common::util;
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use thread;
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thread_local! {
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pub static LOCAL_STDERR: RefCell<Option<Box<Write + Send>>> = {
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RefCell::new(None)
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}
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}
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// Binary interface to the panic runtime that the standard library depends on.
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//
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// The standard library is tagged with `#![needs_panic_runtime]` (introduced in
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// RFC 1513) to indicate that it requires some other crate tagged with
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// `#![panic_runtime]` to exist somewhere. Each panic runtime is intended to
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// implement these symbols (with the same signatures) so we can get matched up
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// to them.
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//
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// One day this may look a little less ad-hoc with the compiler helping out to
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// hook up these functions, but it is not this day!
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#[allow(improper_ctypes)]
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extern {
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fn __rust_maybe_catch_panic(f: fn(*mut u8),
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data: *mut u8,
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data_ptr: *mut usize,
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vtable_ptr: *mut usize) -> u32;
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#[unwind(allowed)]
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fn __rust_start_panic(payload: usize) -> u32;
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}
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#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
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enum Hook {
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Default,
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Custom(*mut (Fn(&PanicInfo) + 'static + Sync + Send)),
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}
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static HOOK_LOCK: RWLock = RWLock::new();
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static mut HOOK: Hook = Hook::Default;
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/// Registers a custom panic hook, replacing any that was previously registered.
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///
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/// The panic hook is invoked when a thread panics, but before the panic runtime
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/// is invoked. As such, the hook will run with both the aborting and unwinding
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/// runtimes. The default hook prints a message to standard error and generates
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/// a backtrace if requested, but this behavior can be customized with the
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/// `set_hook` and `take_hook` functions.
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///
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/// The hook is provided with a `PanicInfo` struct which contains information
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/// about the origin of the panic, including the payload passed to `panic!` and
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/// the source code location from which the panic originated.
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///
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/// The panic hook is a global resource.
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///
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/// # Panics
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///
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/// Panics if called from a panicking thread.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// The following will print "Custom panic hook":
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///
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/// ```should_panic
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/// use std::panic;
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///
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/// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| {
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/// println!("Custom panic hook");
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/// }));
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///
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/// panic!("Normal panic");
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/// ```
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#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")]
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pub fn set_hook(hook: Box<Fn(&PanicInfo) + 'static + Sync + Send>) {
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if thread::panicking() {
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panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread");
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}
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unsafe {
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HOOK_LOCK.write();
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let old_hook = HOOK;
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HOOK = Hook::Custom(Box::into_raw(hook));
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HOOK_LOCK.write_unlock();
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if let Hook::Custom(ptr) = old_hook {
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Box::from_raw(ptr);
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}
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}
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}
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/// Unregisters the current panic hook, returning it.
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///
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/// If no custom hook is registered, the default hook will be returned.
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///
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/// # Panics
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///
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/// Panics if called from a panicking thread.
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///
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/// # Examples
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///
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/// The following will print "Normal panic":
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///
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/// ```should_panic
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/// use std::panic;
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///
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/// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| {
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/// println!("Custom panic hook");
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/// }));
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///
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/// let _ = panic::take_hook();
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///
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/// panic!("Normal panic");
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/// ```
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#[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")]
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pub fn take_hook() -> Box<Fn(&PanicInfo) + 'static + Sync + Send> {
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if thread::panicking() {
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panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread");
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}
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unsafe {
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HOOK_LOCK.write();
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let hook = HOOK;
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HOOK = Hook::Default;
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HOOK_LOCK.write_unlock();
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match hook {
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Hook::Default => Box::new(default_hook),
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Hook::Custom(ptr) => Box::from_raw(ptr),
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}
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}
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}
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fn default_hook(info: &PanicInfo) {
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#[cfg(feature = "backtrace")]
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use sys_common::backtrace;
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// Some platforms know that printing to stderr won't ever actually print
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// anything, and if that's the case we can skip everything below.
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if stderr_prints_nothing() {
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return
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}
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// If this is a double panic, make sure that we print a backtrace
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// for this panic. Otherwise only print it if logging is enabled.
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#[cfg(feature = "backtrace")]
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let log_backtrace = {
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let panics = update_panic_count(0);
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if panics >= 2 {
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Some(backtrace::PrintFormat::Full)
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} else {
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backtrace::log_enabled()
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}
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};
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let location = info.location().unwrap(); // The current implementation always returns Some
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let file = location.file();
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let line = location.line();
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let col = location.column();
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let msg = match info.payload().downcast_ref::<&'static str>() {
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Some(s) => *s,
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None => match info.payload().downcast_ref::<String>() {
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Some(s) => &s[..],
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None => "Box<Any>",
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}
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};
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let mut err = Stderr::new().ok();
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let thread = thread_info::current_thread();
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let name = thread.as_ref().and_then(|t| t.name()).unwrap_or("<unnamed>");
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let write = |err: &mut ::io::Write| {
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let _ = writeln!(err, "thread '{}' panicked at '{}', {}:{}:{}",
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name, msg, file, line, col);
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#[cfg(feature = "backtrace")]
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{
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use sync::atomic::{AtomicBool, Ordering};
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static FIRST_PANIC: AtomicBool = AtomicBool::new(true);
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if let Some(format) = log_backtrace {
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let _ = backtrace::print(err, format);
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} else if FIRST_PANIC.compare_and_swap(true, false, Ordering::SeqCst) {
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let _ = writeln!(err, "note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.");
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}
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}
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};
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let prev = LOCAL_STDERR.with(|s| s.borrow_mut().take());
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match (prev, err.as_mut()) {
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(Some(mut stderr), _) => {
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write(&mut *stderr);
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let mut s = Some(stderr);
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LOCAL_STDERR.with(|slot| {
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*slot.borrow_mut() = s.take();
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});
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}
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(None, Some(ref mut err)) => { write(err) }
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_ => {}
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}
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}
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#[cfg(not(test))]
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#[doc(hidden)]
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#[unstable(feature = "update_panic_count", issue = "0")]
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pub fn update_panic_count(amt: isize) -> usize {
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use cell::Cell;
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thread_local! { static PANIC_COUNT: Cell<usize> = Cell::new(0) }
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PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| {
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let next = (c.get() as isize + amt) as usize;
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c.set(next);
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return next
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})
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}
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#[cfg(test)]
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pub use realstd::rt::update_panic_count;
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/// Invoke a closure, capturing the cause of an unwinding panic if one occurs.
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pub unsafe fn try<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> Result<R, Box<Any + Send>> {
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#[allow(unions_with_drop_fields)]
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union Data<F, R> {
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f: F,
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r: R,
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}
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// We do some sketchy operations with ownership here for the sake of
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// performance. We can only pass pointers down to
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// `__rust_maybe_catch_panic` (can't pass objects by value), so we do all
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// the ownership tracking here manually using a union.
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//
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// We go through a transition where:
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//
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// * First, we set the data to be the closure that we're going to call.
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// * When we make the function call, the `do_call` function below, we take
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// ownership of the function pointer. At this point the `Data` union is
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// entirely uninitialized.
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// * If the closure successfully returns, we write the return value into the
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// data's return slot. Note that `ptr::write` is used as it's overwriting
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// uninitialized data.
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// * Finally, when we come back out of the `__rust_maybe_catch_panic` we're
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// in one of two states:
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//
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// 1. The closure didn't panic, in which case the return value was
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// filled in. We move it out of `data` and return it.
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// 2. The closure panicked, in which case the return value wasn't
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// filled in. In this case the entire `data` union is invalid, so
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// there is no need to drop anything.
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//
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// Once we stack all that together we should have the "most efficient'
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// method of calling a catch panic whilst juggling ownership.
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let mut any_data = 0;
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let mut any_vtable = 0;
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let mut data = Data {
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f,
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};
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let r = __rust_maybe_catch_panic(do_call::<F, R>,
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&mut data as *mut _ as *mut u8,
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&mut any_data,
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&mut any_vtable);
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return if r == 0 {
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debug_assert!(update_panic_count(0) == 0);
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Ok(data.r)
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} else {
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update_panic_count(-1);
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debug_assert!(update_panic_count(0) == 0);
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Err(mem::transmute(raw::TraitObject {
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data: any_data as *mut _,
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vtable: any_vtable as *mut _,
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}))
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};
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fn do_call<F: FnOnce() -> R, R>(data: *mut u8) {
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unsafe {
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let data = data as *mut Data<F, R>;
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let f = ptr::read(&mut (*data).f);
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ptr::write(&mut (*data).r, f());
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}
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}
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}
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/// Determines whether the current thread is unwinding because of panic.
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pub fn panicking() -> bool {
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update_panic_count(0) != 0
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}
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/// Entry point of panic from the libcore crate.
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#[cfg(not(test))]
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#[lang = "panic_fmt"]
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#[unwind(allowed)]
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pub extern fn rust_begin_panic(msg: fmt::Arguments,
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file: &'static str,
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line: u32,
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col: u32) -> ! {
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begin_panic_fmt(&msg, &(file, line, col))
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}
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/// The entry point for panicking with a formatted message.
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///
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/// This is designed to reduce the amount of code required at the call
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/// site as much as possible (so that `panic!()` has as low an impact
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/// on (e.g.) the inlining of other functions as possible), by moving
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/// the actual formatting into this shared place.
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#[unstable(feature = "libstd_sys_internals",
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reason = "used by the panic! macro",
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issue = "0")]
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#[inline(never)] #[cold]
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pub fn begin_panic_fmt(msg: &fmt::Arguments,
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file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! {
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use fmt::Write;
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// We do two allocations here, unfortunately. But (a) they're
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// required with the current scheme, and (b) we don't handle
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// panic + OOM properly anyway (see comment in begin_panic
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// below).
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let mut s = String::new();
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let _ = s.write_fmt(*msg);
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rust_panic_with_hook(&mut PanicPayload::new(s), Some(msg), file_line_col)
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}
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/// This is the entry point of panicking for panic!() and assert!().
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#[unstable(feature = "libstd_sys_internals",
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reason = "used by the panic! macro",
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issue = "0")]
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#[inline(never)] #[cold] // avoid code bloat at the call sites as much as possible
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pub fn begin_panic<M: Any + Send>(msg: M, file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! {
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// Note that this should be the only allocation performed in this code path.
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// Currently this means that panic!() on OOM will invoke this code path,
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// but then again we're not really ready for panic on OOM anyway. If
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// we do start doing this, then we should propagate this allocation to
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// be performed in the parent of this thread instead of the thread that's
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// panicking.
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rust_panic_with_hook(&mut PanicPayload::new(msg), None, file_line_col)
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}
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struct PanicPayload<A> {
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inner: Option<A>,
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}
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impl<A: Send + 'static> PanicPayload<A> {
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fn new(inner: A) -> PanicPayload<A> {
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PanicPayload { inner: Some(inner) }
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}
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}
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unsafe impl<A: Send + 'static> BoxMeUp for PanicPayload<A> {
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fn box_me_up(&mut self) -> *mut (Any + Send) {
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let data = match self.inner.take() {
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Some(a) => Box::new(a) as Box<Any + Send>,
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None => Box::new(()),
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};
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Box::into_raw(data)
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}
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fn get(&self) -> &(Any + Send) {
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match self.inner {
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Some(ref a) => a,
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None => &(),
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}
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}
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}
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/// Executes the primary logic for a panic, including checking for recursive
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/// panics and panic hooks.
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///
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/// This is the entry point or panics from libcore, formatted panics, and
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/// `Box<Any>` panics. Here we'll verify that we're not panicking recursively,
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/// run panic hooks, and then delegate to the actual implementation of panics.
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fn rust_panic_with_hook(payload: &mut BoxMeUp,
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message: Option<&fmt::Arguments>,
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file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! {
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let (file, line, col) = *file_line_col;
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let panics = update_panic_count(1);
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// If this is the third nested call (e.g. panics == 2, this is 0-indexed),
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// the panic hook probably triggered the last panic, otherwise the
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// double-panic check would have aborted the process. In this case abort the
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// process real quickly as we don't want to try calling it again as it'll
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// probably just panic again.
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if panics > 2 {
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util::dumb_print(format_args!("thread panicked while processing \
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panic. aborting.\n"));
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unsafe { intrinsics::abort() }
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}
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unsafe {
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let info = PanicInfo::internal_constructor(
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payload.get(),
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message,
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Location::internal_constructor(file, line, col),
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);
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HOOK_LOCK.read();
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match HOOK {
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Hook::Default => default_hook(&info),
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Hook::Custom(ptr) => (*ptr)(&info),
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}
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HOOK_LOCK.read_unlock();
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}
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if panics > 1 {
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// If a thread panics while it's already unwinding then we
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// have limited options. Currently our preference is to
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// just abort. In the future we may consider resuming
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// unwinding or otherwise exiting the thread cleanly.
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util::dumb_print(format_args!("thread panicked while panicking. \
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aborting.\n"));
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unsafe { intrinsics::abort() }
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}
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rust_panic(payload)
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}
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/// Shim around rust_panic. Called by resume_unwind.
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pub fn update_count_then_panic(msg: Box<Any + Send>) -> ! {
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update_panic_count(1);
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struct RewrapBox(Box<Any + Send>);
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unsafe impl BoxMeUp for RewrapBox {
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fn box_me_up(&mut self) -> *mut (Any + Send) {
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Box::into_raw(mem::replace(&mut self.0, Box::new(())))
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}
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fn get(&self) -> &(Any + Send) {
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&*self.0
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}
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}
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rust_panic(&mut RewrapBox(msg))
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}
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/// A private no-mangle function on which to slap yer breakpoints.
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#[no_mangle]
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#[allow(private_no_mangle_fns)] // yes we get it, but we like breakpoints
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pub fn rust_panic(mut msg: &mut BoxMeUp) -> ! {
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let code = unsafe {
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let obj = &mut msg as *mut &mut BoxMeUp;
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__rust_start_panic(obj as usize)
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};
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rtabort!("failed to initiate panic, error {}", code)
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}
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