Unwinding library in Rust and for Rust ====================================== This library serves two purposes: 1. Provide a pure Rust alternative to libgcc_eh or libunwind. 2. Provide easier unwinding support for `#![no_std]` targets. Currently supports x86_64 and RV64. ## Unwinder The unwinder can be enabled with `unwinder` feature. Here are the feature gates related to the unwinder: | Feature | Default | Description | |--------------|---------|-| | unwinder | Yes | The primary feature gate to enable the unwinder | | fde-phdr | Yes | Use `dl_iterator_phdr` to retrieve frame unwind table. Depends on libc. | | fde-registry | Yes | Provide `__register__frame` and others for dynamic registration | | fde-static | No | Use `__executable_start`, `__etext` and `__eh_frame` to retrieve frame unwind table. The former two symbols are usually provided by the linker, while the last one would need to be provided by the user via linker script. | | dwarf-expr | Yes | Enable the dwarf expression evaluator. Usually not necessary for Rust | | hide-trace | Yes | Hide unwinder frames in back trace | If you want to use the unwinder for other Rust (C++, or any programs that utilize the unwinder), you can build the [`unwind_dyn`](cdylib) crate provided, and use `LD_PRELOAD` to replace the system unwinder with it. ```sh cd cdylib cargo build --release # Test the unwinder using rustc. Why not :) LD_PRELOAD=`../target/release/libunwind_dyn.so` rustc +nightly -Ztreat-err-as-bug ``` If you want to link to the unwinder in a Rust binary, simply add ```rust extern crate unwind; ``` ## Personality and other utilities The library also provides Rust personality function. This can work with the unwinder described above or with a different unwinder. This can be handy if you are working on a `#![no_std]` binary/staticlib/cdylib and you still want unwinding support. Here are the feature gates related: | Feature | Default | Description | |---------------|---------|-| | personality | No | Provides `#[lang = eh_personality]` | | print | No | Provides `(e)?print(ln)?`. This is really only here because panic handler needs to provide things. Depends on libc. | | panic | No | Provides `begin_panic` and `catch_unwind`. Only stack unwinding functionality is provided and no printing is done, because this feature does not depend on libc. | | panic-handler | No | Provides `#[panic_handler]`. Provides similar behaviour on panic to std, with `RUST_BACKTRACE` support as well. Stack trace won't have symbols though. Depends on libc. | | system-alloc | No | Provides a global allocator which calls `malloc` and friends. Provided for convience. | If you are writing a `#![no_std]` program, simply enable `personality`, `panic-handler` and `system-alloc` in addition to the defaults, you instantly obtains the ability to do unwinding! An example is given in [`example/`](example). ## Baremetal To use this library for baremetal projects, disable default features and enable `unwinder`, `fde-static`, `personality`, `panic`. `dwarf-expr` and `hide-trace` are optional. Modify the linker script by ```ld /* Inserting these two lines */ . = ALIGN(8); PROVIDE(__eh_frame = .); /* before .eh_frame rule */ .eh_frame : { KEEP (*(.eh_frame)) *(.eh_frame.*) } ``` And that's it! After you ensured that the global allocator is functional, you can use `unwind::panic::begin_panic` to initiate an unwing and catch using `unwind::panic::catch_unwind`, as if you have a `std`. If you have your own version of `thread_local` and `println!` working, you can port [`panic_handler.rs`](src/panic_handler.rs) for double-panic protection and stack traces! ## TODO * A better project name! * Remove dependencies on `alloc`.