//! Runtime services //! //! The `rt` module provides a narrow set of runtime services, //! including the global heap (exported in `heap`) and unwinding and //! backtrace support. The APIs in this module are highly unstable, //! and should be considered as private implementation details for the //! time being. #![unstable( feature = "rt", reason = "this public module should not exist and is highly likely \ to disappear", issue = "none" )] #![doc(hidden)] #![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] #![allow(unused_macros)] #[rustfmt::skip] pub use crate::panicking::{begin_panic, panic_count}; pub use core::panicking::{panic_display, panic_fmt}; #[rustfmt::skip] use crate::any::Any; use crate::sync::Once; use crate::thread::{self, main_thread}; use crate::{mem, panic, sys}; // Prints to the "panic output", depending on the platform this may be: // - the standard error output // - some dedicated platform specific output // - nothing (so this macro is a no-op) macro_rules! rtprintpanic { ($($t:tt)*) => { #[cfg(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"))] if let Some(mut out) = crate::sys::stdio::panic_output() { let _ = crate::io::Write::write_fmt(&mut out, format_args!($($t)*)); } #[cfg(feature = "panic_immediate_abort")] { let _ = format_args!($($t)*); } } } macro_rules! rtabort { ($($t:tt)*) => { { rtprintpanic!("fatal runtime error: {}\n", format_args!($($t)*)); crate::sys::abort_internal(); } } } macro_rules! rtassert { ($e:expr) => { if !$e { rtabort!(concat!("assertion failed: ", stringify!($e))); } }; } macro_rules! rtunwrap { ($ok:ident, $e:expr) => { match $e { $ok(v) => v, ref err => { let err = err.as_ref().map(drop); // map Ok/Some which might not be Debug rtabort!(concat!("unwrap failed: ", stringify!($e), " = {:?}"), err) } } }; } fn handle_rt_panic(e: Box) -> T { mem::forget(e); rtabort!("initialization or cleanup bug"); } // One-time runtime initialization. // Runs before `main`. // SAFETY: must be called only once during runtime initialization. // NOTE: this is not guaranteed to run, for example when Rust code is called externally. // // # The `sigpipe` parameter // // Since 2014, the Rust runtime on Unix has set the `SIGPIPE` handler to // `SIG_IGN`. Applications have good reasons to want a different behavior // though, so there is a `-Zon-broken-pipe` compiler flag that // can be used to select how `SIGPIPE` shall be setup (if changed at all) before // `fn main()` is called. See // for more info. // // The `sigpipe` parameter to this function gets its value via the code that // rustc generates to invoke `fn lang_start()`. The reason we have `sigpipe` for // all platforms and not only Unix, is because std is not allowed to have `cfg` // directives as this high level. See the module docs in // `src/tools/tidy/src/pal.rs` for more info. On all other platforms, `sigpipe` // has a value, but its value is ignored. // // Even though it is an `u8`, it only ever has 4 values. These are documented in // `compiler/rustc_session/src/config/sigpipe.rs`. #[cfg_attr(test, allow(dead_code))] unsafe fn init(argc: isize, argv: *const *const u8, sigpipe: u8) { #[cfg_attr(target_os = "teeos", allow(unused_unsafe))] unsafe { sys::init(argc, argv, sigpipe) }; // Remember the main thread ID to give it the correct name. // SAFETY: this is the only time and place where we call this function. unsafe { main_thread::set(thread::current_id()) }; } /// Clean up the thread-local runtime state. This *should* be run after all other /// code managed by the Rust runtime, but will not cause UB if that condition is /// not fulfilled. Also note that this function is not guaranteed to be run, but /// skipping it will cause leaks and therefore is to be avoided. pub(crate) fn thread_cleanup() { // This function is run in situations where unwinding leads to an abort // (think `extern "C"` functions). Abort here instead so that we can // print a nice message. panic::catch_unwind(|| { crate::thread::drop_current(); }) .unwrap_or_else(handle_rt_panic); } // One-time runtime cleanup. // Runs after `main` or at program exit. // NOTE: this is not guaranteed to run, for example when the program aborts. pub(crate) fn cleanup() { static CLEANUP: Once = Once::new(); CLEANUP.call_once(|| unsafe { // Flush stdout and disable buffering. crate::io::cleanup(); // SAFETY: Only called once during runtime cleanup. sys::cleanup(); }); } // To reduce the generated code of the new `lang_start`, this function is doing // the real work. #[cfg(not(test))] fn lang_start_internal( main: &(dyn Fn() -> i32 + Sync + crate::panic::RefUnwindSafe), argc: isize, argv: *const *const u8, sigpipe: u8, ) -> isize { // Guard against the code called by this function from unwinding outside of the Rust-controlled // code, which is UB. This is a requirement imposed by a combination of how the // `#[lang="start"]` attribute is implemented as well as by the implementation of the panicking // mechanism itself. // // There are a couple of instances where unwinding can begin. First is inside of the // `rt::init`, `rt::cleanup` and similar functions controlled by bstd. In those instances a // panic is a std implementation bug. A quite likely one too, as there isn't any way to // prevent std from accidentally introducing a panic to these functions. Another is from // user code from `main` or, more nefariously, as described in e.g. issue #86030. // // We use `catch_unwind` with `handle_rt_panic` instead of `abort_unwind` to make the error in // case of a panic a bit nicer. panic::catch_unwind(move || { // SAFETY: Only called once during runtime initialization. unsafe { init(argc, argv, sigpipe) }; let ret_code = panic::catch_unwind(main).unwrap_or_else(move |payload| { // Carefully dispose of the panic payload. let payload = panic::AssertUnwindSafe(payload); panic::catch_unwind(move || drop({ payload }.0)).unwrap_or_else(move |e| { mem::forget(e); // do *not* drop the 2nd payload rtabort!("drop of the panic payload panicked"); }); // Return error code for panicking programs. 101 }); let ret_code = ret_code as isize; cleanup(); // Guard against multiple threads calling `libc::exit` concurrently. // See the documentation for `unique_thread_exit` for more information. crate::sys::exit_guard::unique_thread_exit(); ret_code }) .unwrap_or_else(handle_rt_panic) } #[cfg(not(any(test, doctest)))] #[lang = "start"] fn lang_start( main: fn() -> T, argc: isize, argv: *const *const u8, sigpipe: u8, ) -> isize { lang_start_internal( &move || crate::sys::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace(main).report().to_i32(), argc, argv, sigpipe, ) }