/* Exception (throw catch) mechanism, for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright (C) 1986-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #ifndef EXCEPTIONS_H #define EXCEPTIONS_H #include "ui-out.h" /* If E is an exception, print it's error message on the specified stream. For _fprintf, prefix the message with PREFIX... */ extern void exception_print (struct ui_file *file, struct gdb_exception e); extern void exception_fprintf (struct ui_file *file, struct gdb_exception e, const char *prefix, ...) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (3, 4); /* Call FUNC(UIOUT, FUNC_ARGS) but wrapped within an exception handler. If an exception (enum return_reason) is thrown using throw_exception() than all cleanups installed since catch_exceptions() was entered are invoked, the (-ve) exception value is then returned by catch_exceptions. If FUNC() returns normally (with a positive or zero return value) then that value is returned by catch_exceptions(). It is an internal_error() for FUNC() to return a negative value. For the period of the FUNC() call: UIOUT is installed as the output builder; ERRSTRING is installed as the error/quit message; and a new cleanup_chain is established. The old values are restored before catch_exceptions() returns. The variant catch_exceptions_with_msg() is the same as catch_exceptions() but adds the ability to return an allocated copy of the gdb error message. This is used when a silent error is issued and the caller wants to manually issue the error message. MASK specifies what to catch; it is normally set to RETURN_MASK_ALL, if for no other reason than that the code which calls catch_errors might not be set up to deal with a quit which isn't caught. But if the code can deal with it, it generally should be RETURN_MASK_ERROR, unless for some reason it is more useful to abort only the portion of the operation inside the catch_errors. Note that quit should return to the command line fairly quickly, even if some further processing is being done. FIXME; cagney/2001-08-13: The need to override the global UIOUT builder variable should just go away. This function supersedes catch_errors(). This function uses SETJMP() and LONGJUMP(). */ struct ui_out; typedef int (catch_exceptions_ftype) (struct ui_out *ui_out, void *args); extern int catch_exceptions (struct ui_out *uiout, catch_exceptions_ftype *func, void *func_args, return_mask mask); typedef void (catch_exception_ftype) (struct ui_out *ui_out, void *args); extern int catch_exceptions_with_msg (struct ui_out *uiout, catch_exceptions_ftype *func, void *func_args, char **gdberrmsg, return_mask mask); /* If CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE throws an error, catch_errors() returns zero otherwize the result from CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE is returned. It is probably useful for CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE to always return a non-zero value. It's unfortunate that, catch_errors() does not return an indication of the exact exception that it caught - quit_flag might help. This function is superseded by catch_exceptions(). */ typedef int (catch_errors_ftype) (void *); extern int catch_errors (catch_errors_ftype *, void *, char *, return_mask); #endif