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panicking.rs
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// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
//! 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<Any>` 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;
#[cold] #[inline(never)] // this is the slow path, always
#[lang = "panic"]
pub fn panic(expr_file_line_col: &(&'static str, &'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! {
// 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] #[inline(never)]
#[lang = "panic_bounds_check"]
fn panic_bounds_check(file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32),
index: usize, len: usize) -> ! {
panic_fmt(format_args!("index out of bounds: the len is {} but the index is {}",
len, index), file_line_col)
}
#[cold] #[inline(never)]
pub fn panic_fmt(fmt: fmt::Arguments, file_line_col: &(&'static str, u32, u32)) -> ! {
#[allow(improper_ctypes)]
extern {
#[lang = "panic_fmt"]
#[unwind]
fn panic_impl(fmt: fmt::Arguments, file: &'static str, line: u32, col: u32) -> !;
}
let (file, line, col) = *file_line_col;
unsafe { panic_impl(fmt, file, line, col) }
}