/usr/include/kj/exception.h is in libcapnp-dev 0.6.1-1ubuntu1.
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// Licensed under the MIT License:
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
#ifndef KJ_EXCEPTION_H_
#define KJ_EXCEPTION_H_
#if defined(__GNUC__) && !KJ_HEADER_WARNINGS
#pragma GCC system_header
#endif
#include "memory.h"
#include "array.h"
#include "string.h"
namespace kj {
class ExceptionImpl;
class Exception {
// Exception thrown in case of fatal errors.
//
// Actually, a subclass of this which also implements std::exception will be thrown, but we hide
// that fact from the interface to avoid #including <exception>.
public:
enum class Type {
// What kind of failure?
FAILED = 0,
// Something went wrong. This is the usual error type. KJ_ASSERT and KJ_REQUIRE throw this
// error type.
OVERLOADED = 1,
// The call failed because of a temporary lack of resources. This could be space resources
// (out of memory, out of disk space) or time resources (request queue overflow, operation
// timed out).
//
// The operation might work if tried again, but it should NOT be repeated immediately as this
// may simply exacerbate the problem.
DISCONNECTED = 2,
// The call required communication over a connection that has been lost. The callee will need
// to re-establish connections and try again.
UNIMPLEMENTED = 3
// The requested method is not implemented. The caller may wish to revert to a fallback
// approach based on other methods.
// IF YOU ADD A NEW VALUE:
// - Update the stringifier.
// - Update Cap'n Proto's RPC protocol's Exception.Type enum.
};
Exception(Type type, const char* file, int line, String description = nullptr) noexcept;
Exception(Type type, String file, int line, String description = nullptr) noexcept;
Exception(const Exception& other) noexcept;
Exception(Exception&& other) = default;
~Exception() noexcept;
const char* getFile() const { return file; }
int getLine() const { return line; }
Type getType() const { return type; }
StringPtr getDescription() const { return description; }
ArrayPtr<void* const> getStackTrace() const { return arrayPtr(trace, traceCount); }
struct Context {
// Describes a bit about what was going on when the exception was thrown.
const char* file;
int line;
String description;
Maybe<Own<Context>> next;
Context(const char* file, int line, String&& description, Maybe<Own<Context>>&& next)
: file(file), line(line), description(mv(description)), next(mv(next)) {}
Context(const Context& other) noexcept;
};
inline Maybe<const Context&> getContext() const {
KJ_IF_MAYBE(c, context) {
return **c;
} else {
return nullptr;
}
}
void wrapContext(const char* file, int line, String&& description);
// Wraps the context in a new node. This becomes the head node returned by getContext() -- it
// is expected that contexts will be added in reverse order as the exception passes up the
// callback stack.
KJ_NOINLINE void extendTrace(uint ignoreCount);
// Append the current stack trace to the exception's trace, ignoring the first `ignoreCount`
// frames (see `getStackTrace()` for discussion of `ignoreCount`).
KJ_NOINLINE void truncateCommonTrace();
// Remove the part of the stack trace which the exception shares with the caller of this method.
// This is used by the async library to remove the async infrastructure from the stack trace
// before replacing it with the async trace.
void addTrace(void* ptr);
// Append the given pointer to the backtrace, if it is not already full. This is used by the
// async library to trace through the promise chain that led to the exception.
private:
String ownFile;
const char* file;
int line;
Type type;
String description;
Maybe<Own<Context>> context;
void* trace[32];
uint traceCount;
friend class ExceptionImpl;
};
StringPtr KJ_STRINGIFY(Exception::Type type);
String KJ_STRINGIFY(const Exception& e);
// =======================================================================================
enum class LogSeverity {
INFO, // Information describing what the code is up to, which users may request to see
// with a flag like `--verbose`. Does not indicate a problem. Not printed by
// default; you must call setLogLevel(INFO) to enable.
WARNING, // A problem was detected but execution can continue with correct output.
ERROR, // Something is wrong, but execution can continue with garbage output.
FATAL, // Something went wrong, and execution cannot continue.
DBG // Temporary debug logging. See KJ_DBG.
// Make sure to update the stringifier if you add a new severity level.
};
StringPtr KJ_STRINGIFY(LogSeverity severity);
class ExceptionCallback {
// If you don't like C++ exceptions, you may implement and register an ExceptionCallback in order
// to perform your own exception handling. For example, a reasonable thing to do is to have
// onRecoverableException() set a flag indicating that an error occurred, and then check for that
// flag just before writing to storage and/or returning results to the user. If the flag is set,
// discard whatever you have and return an error instead.
//
// ExceptionCallbacks must always be allocated on the stack. When an exception is thrown, the
// newest ExceptionCallback on the calling thread's stack is called. The default implementation
// of each method calls the next-oldest ExceptionCallback for that thread. Thus the callbacks
// behave a lot like try/catch blocks, except that they are called before any stack unwinding
// occurs.
public:
ExceptionCallback();
KJ_DISALLOW_COPY(ExceptionCallback);
virtual ~ExceptionCallback() noexcept(false);
virtual void onRecoverableException(Exception&& exception);
// Called when an exception has been raised, but the calling code has the ability to continue by
// producing garbage output. This method _should_ throw the exception, but is allowed to simply
// return if garbage output is acceptable.
//
// The global default implementation throws an exception unless the library was compiled with
// -fno-exceptions, in which case it logs an error and returns.
virtual void onFatalException(Exception&& exception);
// Called when an exception has been raised and the calling code cannot continue. If this method
// returns normally, abort() will be called. The method must throw the exception to avoid
// aborting.
//
// The global default implementation throws an exception unless the library was compiled with
// -fno-exceptions, in which case it logs an error and returns.
virtual void logMessage(LogSeverity severity, const char* file, int line, int contextDepth,
String&& text);
// Called when something wants to log some debug text. `contextDepth` indicates how many levels
// of context the message passed through; it may make sense to indent the message accordingly.
//
// The global default implementation writes the text to stderr.
enum class StackTraceMode {
FULL,
// Stringifying a stack trace will attempt to determine source file and line numbers. This may
// be expensive. For example, on Linux, this shells out to `addr2line`.
//
// This is the default in debug builds.
ADDRESS_ONLY,
// Stringifying a stack trace will only generate a list of code addresses.
//
// This is the default in release builds.
NONE
// Generating a stack trace will always return an empty array.
//
// This avoids ever unwinding the stack. On Windows in particular, the stack unwinding library
// has been observed to be pretty slow, so exception-heavy code might benefit significantly
// from this setting. (But exceptions should be rare...)
};
virtual StackTraceMode stackTraceMode();
// Returns the current preferred stack trace mode.
protected:
ExceptionCallback& next;
private:
ExceptionCallback(ExceptionCallback& next);
class RootExceptionCallback;
friend ExceptionCallback& getExceptionCallback();
};
ExceptionCallback& getExceptionCallback();
// Returns the current exception callback.
KJ_NOINLINE KJ_NORETURN(void throwFatalException(kj::Exception&& exception, uint ignoreCount = 0));
// Invoke the exception callback to throw the given fatal exception. If the exception callback
// returns, abort.
KJ_NOINLINE void throwRecoverableException(kj::Exception&& exception, uint ignoreCount = 0);
// Invoke the exception callback to throw the given recoverable exception. If the exception
// callback returns, return normally.
// =======================================================================================
namespace _ { class Runnable; }
template <typename Func>
Maybe<Exception> runCatchingExceptions(Func&& func) noexcept;
// Executes the given function (usually, a lambda returning nothing) catching any exceptions that
// are thrown. Returns the Exception if there was one, or null if the operation completed normally.
// Non-KJ exceptions will be wrapped.
//
// If exception are disabled (e.g. with -fno-exceptions), this will still detect whether any
// recoverable exceptions occurred while running the function and will return those.
class UnwindDetector {
// Utility for detecting when a destructor is called due to unwind. Useful for:
// - Avoiding throwing exceptions in this case, which would terminate the program.
// - Detecting whether to commit or roll back a transaction.
//
// To use this class, either inherit privately from it or declare it as a member. The detector
// works by comparing the exception state against that when the constructor was called, so for
// an object that was actually constructed during exception unwind, it will behave as if no
// unwind is taking place. This is usually the desired behavior.
public:
UnwindDetector();
bool isUnwinding() const;
// Returns true if the current thread is in a stack unwind that it wasn't in at the time the
// object was constructed.
template <typename Func>
void catchExceptionsIfUnwinding(Func&& func) const;
// Runs the given function (e.g., a lambda). If isUnwinding() is true, any exceptions are
// caught and treated as secondary faults, meaning they are considered to be side-effects of the
// exception that is unwinding the stack. Otherwise, exceptions are passed through normally.
private:
uint uncaughtCount;
void catchExceptionsAsSecondaryFaults(_::Runnable& runnable) const;
};
namespace _ { // private
class Runnable {
public:
virtual void run() = 0;
};
template <typename Func>
class RunnableImpl: public Runnable {
public:
RunnableImpl(Func&& func): func(kj::mv(func)) {}
void run() override {
func();
}
private:
Func func;
};
Maybe<Exception> runCatchingExceptions(Runnable& runnable) noexcept;
} // namespace _ (private)
template <typename Func>
Maybe<Exception> runCatchingExceptions(Func&& func) noexcept {
_::RunnableImpl<Decay<Func>> runnable(kj::fwd<Func>(func));
return _::runCatchingExceptions(runnable);
}
template <typename Func>
void UnwindDetector::catchExceptionsIfUnwinding(Func&& func) const {
if (isUnwinding()) {
_::RunnableImpl<Decay<Func>> runnable(kj::fwd<Func>(func));
catchExceptionsAsSecondaryFaults(runnable);
} else {
func();
}
}
#define KJ_ON_SCOPE_SUCCESS(code) \
::kj::UnwindDetector KJ_UNIQUE_NAME(_kjUnwindDetector); \
KJ_DEFER(if (!KJ_UNIQUE_NAME(_kjUnwindDetector).isUnwinding()) { code; })
// Runs `code` if the current scope is exited normally (not due to an exception).
#define KJ_ON_SCOPE_FAILURE(code) \
::kj::UnwindDetector KJ_UNIQUE_NAME(_kjUnwindDetector); \
KJ_DEFER(if (KJ_UNIQUE_NAME(_kjUnwindDetector).isUnwinding()) { code; })
// Runs `code` if the current scope is exited due to an exception.
// =======================================================================================
KJ_NOINLINE ArrayPtr<void* const> getStackTrace(ArrayPtr<void*> space, uint ignoreCount);
// Attempt to get the current stack trace, returning a list of pointers to instructions. The
// returned array is a slice of `space`. Provide a larger `space` to get a deeper stack trace.
// If the platform doesn't support stack traces, returns an empty array.
//
// `ignoreCount` items will be truncated from the front of the trace. This is useful for chopping
// off a prefix of the trace that is uninteresting to the developer because it's just locations
// inside the debug infrastructure that is requesting the trace. Be careful to mark functions as
// KJ_NOINLINE if you intend to count them in `ignoreCount`. Note that, unfortunately, the
// ignored entries will still waste space in the `space` array (and the returned array's `begin()`
// is never exactly equal to `space.begin()` due to this effect, even if `ignoreCount` is zero
// since `getStackTrace()` needs to ignore its own internal frames).
String stringifyStackTrace(ArrayPtr<void* const>);
// Convert the stack trace to a string with file names and line numbers. This may involve executing
// suprocesses.
String getStackTrace();
// Get a stack trace right now and stringify it. Useful for debugging.
void printStackTraceOnCrash();
// Registers signal handlers on common "crash" signals like SIGSEGV that will (attempt to) print
// a stack trace. You should call this as early as possible on program startup. Programs using
// KJ_MAIN get this automatically.
kj::StringPtr trimSourceFilename(kj::StringPtr filename);
// Given a source code file name, trim off noisy prefixes like "src/" or
// "/ekam-provider/canonical/".
} // namespace kj
#endif // KJ_EXCEPTION_H_
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