7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
52805d233b std: Avoid panics in rust_eh_personality
This commit removes a few calls to panic and/or assert in `rust_eh_personality`.
This function definitely can't itself panic (that'd probably segfault or do
something else weird) and I was also noticing that a `pub extern fn foo() {}`
cdylib was abnormally large. Turns out all that size was the panicking machinery
brought in by the personality function!

The change here is to return a `Result` internally so we can bubble up the fatal
error, eventually translating to the appropriate error code for the libunwind
ABI.
2017-06-08 07:06:43 -07:00
Srinivas Reddy Thatiparthy
1cc1dcce7d
run rustfmt on libpanic_unwind 2016-10-18 23:09:47 +05:30
Vadim Chugunov
ec8518e4fb Fix typos 2016-07-26 18:53:47 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
5fbcf08dd8 Looser LSDA parsing 2016-07-25 09:37:41 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
051c2d14fb Implement rust_eh_personality in Rust, remove rust_eh_personality_catch.
Well, not quite: ARM EHABI platforms still use the old scheme -- for now.
2016-07-22 14:58:35 -07:00
Srinivas Reddy Thatiparthy
00bbc27276 run rustfmt on libpanic_unwind folder 2016-06-05 23:34:23 +05:30
Alex Crichton
0ec321f7b5 rustc: Implement custom panic runtimes
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1513] which allows applications to
alter the behavior of panics at compile time. A new compiler flag, `-C panic`,
is added and accepts the values `unwind` or `panic`, with the default being
`unwind`. This model affects how code is generated for the local crate, skipping
generation of landing pads with `-C panic=abort`.

[RFC 1513]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1513-less-unwinding.md

Panic implementations are then provided by crates tagged with
`#![panic_runtime]` and lazily required by crates with
`#![needs_panic_runtime]`. The panic strategy (`-C panic` value) of the panic
runtime must match the final product, and if the panic strategy is not `abort`
then the entire DAG must have the same panic strategy.

With the `-C panic=abort` strategy, users can expect a stable method to disable
generation of landing pads, improving optimization in niche scenarios,
decreasing compile time, and decreasing output binary size. With the `-C
panic=unwind` strategy users can expect the existing ability to isolate failure
in Rust code from the outside world.

Organizationally, this commit dismantles the `sys_common::unwind` module in
favor of some bits moving part of it to `libpanic_unwind` and the rest into the
`panicking` module in libstd. The custom panic runtime support is pretty similar
to the custom allocator support with the only major difference being how the
panic runtime is injected (takes the `-C panic` flag into account).
2016-05-09 08:22:36 -07:00