OpenCores
URL https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc/openrisc/trunk

Subversion Repositories openrisc

[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-dev/] [or1k-gcc/] [libgo/] [runtime/] [go-deferred-recover.c] - Blame information for rev 747

Details | Compare with Previous | View Log

Line No. Rev Author Line
1 747 jeremybenn
/* go-deferred-recover.c -- support for a deferred recover function.
2
 
3
   Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
4
   Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
5
   license that can be found in the LICENSE file.  */
6
 
7
#include <stddef.h>
8
 
9
#include "runtime.h"
10
#include "go-panic.h"
11
#include "go-defer.h"
12
 
13
/* This is called when a call to recover is deferred.  That is,
14
   something like
15
     defer recover()
16
 
17
   We need to handle this specially.  In 6g/8g, the recover function
18
   looks up the stack frame.  In particular, that means that a
19
   deferred recover will not recover a panic thrown in the same
20
   function that defers the recover.  It will only recover a panic
21
   thrown in a function that defers the deferred call to recover.
22
 
23
   In other words:
24
 
25
   func f1() {
26
        defer recover() // does not stop panic
27
        panic(0)
28
   }
29
 
30
   func f2() {
31
        defer func() {
32
                defer recover() // stops panic(0)
33
        }()
34
        panic(0)
35
   }
36
 
37
   func f3() {
38
        defer func() {
39
                defer recover() // does not stop panic
40
                panic(0)
41
        }()
42
        panic(1)
43
   }
44
 
45
   func f4() {
46
        defer func() {
47
                defer func() {
48
                        defer recover() // stops panic(0)
49
                }()
50
                panic(0)
51
        }()
52
        panic(1)
53
   }
54
 
55
   The interesting case here is f3.  As can be seen from f2, the
56
   deferred recover could pick up panic(1).  However, this does not
57
   happen because it is blocked by the panic(0).
58
 
59
   When a function calls recover, then when we invoke it we pass a
60
   hidden parameter indicating whether it should recover something.
61
   This parameter is set based on whether the function is being
62
   invoked directly from defer.  The parameter winds up determining
63
   whether __go_recover or __go_deferred_recover is called at all.
64
 
65
   In the case of a deferred recover, the hidden parameter which
66
   controls the call is actually the one set up for the function which
67
   runs the defer recover() statement.  That is the right thing in all
68
   the cases above except for f3.  In f3 the function is permitted to
69
   call recover, but the deferred recover call is not.  We address
70
   that here by checking for that specific case before calling
71
   recover.  If this function was deferred when there is already a
72
   panic on the panic stack, then we can only recover that panic, not
73
   any other.
74
 
75
   Note that we can get away with using a special function here
76
   because you are not permitted to take the address of a predeclared
77
   function like recover.  */
78
 
79
struct __go_empty_interface
80
__go_deferred_recover ()
81
{
82
  G *g;
83
 
84
  g = runtime_g ();
85
  if (g->defer == NULL || g->defer->__panic != g->panic)
86
    {
87
      struct __go_empty_interface ret;
88
 
89
      ret.__type_descriptor = NULL;
90
      ret.__object = NULL;
91
      return ret;
92
    }
93
  return __go_recover ();
94
}

powered by: WebSVN 2.1.0

© copyright 1999-2024 OpenCores.org, equivalent to Oliscience, all rights reserved. OpenCores®, registered trademark.