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[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-dev/] [or1k-gcc/] [libgo/] [runtime/] [go-deferred-recover.c] - Blame information for rev 771

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1 747 jeremybenn
/* go-deferred-recover.c -- support for a deferred recover function.
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   Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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   Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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   license that can be found in the LICENSE file.  */
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#include <stddef.h>
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#include "runtime.h"
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#include "go-panic.h"
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#include "go-defer.h"
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/* This is called when a call to recover is deferred.  That is,
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   something like
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     defer recover()
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   We need to handle this specially.  In 6g/8g, the recover function
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   looks up the stack frame.  In particular, that means that a
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   deferred recover will not recover a panic thrown in the same
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   function that defers the recover.  It will only recover a panic
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   thrown in a function that defers the deferred call to recover.
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   In other words:
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   func f1() {
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        defer recover() // does not stop panic
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        panic(0)
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   }
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   func f2() {
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        defer func() {
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                defer recover() // stops panic(0)
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        }()
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        panic(0)
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   }
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   func f3() {
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        defer func() {
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                defer recover() // does not stop panic
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                panic(0)
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        }()
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        panic(1)
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   }
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   func f4() {
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        defer func() {
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                defer func() {
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                        defer recover() // stops panic(0)
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                }()
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                panic(0)
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        }()
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        panic(1)
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   }
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   The interesting case here is f3.  As can be seen from f2, the
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   deferred recover could pick up panic(1).  However, this does not
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   happen because it is blocked by the panic(0).
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   When a function calls recover, then when we invoke it we pass a
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   hidden parameter indicating whether it should recover something.
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   This parameter is set based on whether the function is being
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   invoked directly from defer.  The parameter winds up determining
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   whether __go_recover or __go_deferred_recover is called at all.
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   In the case of a deferred recover, the hidden parameter which
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   controls the call is actually the one set up for the function which
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   runs the defer recover() statement.  That is the right thing in all
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   the cases above except for f3.  In f3 the function is permitted to
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   call recover, but the deferred recover call is not.  We address
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   that here by checking for that specific case before calling
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   recover.  If this function was deferred when there is already a
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   panic on the panic stack, then we can only recover that panic, not
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   any other.
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   Note that we can get away with using a special function here
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   because you are not permitted to take the address of a predeclared
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   function like recover.  */
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struct __go_empty_interface
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__go_deferred_recover ()
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{
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  G *g;
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  g = runtime_g ();
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  if (g->defer == NULL || g->defer->__panic != g->panic)
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    {
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      struct __go_empty_interface ret;
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      ret.__type_descriptor = NULL;
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      ret.__object = NULL;
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      return ret;
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    }
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  return __go_recover ();
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}

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