| //! Implementation of various bits and pieces of the `panic!` macro and | 
 | //! associated runtime pieces. | 
 | //! | 
 | //! Specifically, this module contains the implementation of: | 
 | //! | 
 | //! * Panic hooks | 
 | //! * Executing a panic up to doing the actual implementation | 
 | //! * Shims around "try" | 
 |  | 
 | #![deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)] | 
 |  | 
 | use core::panic::{Location, PanicPayload}; | 
 |  | 
 | // make sure to use the stderr output configured | 
 | // by libtest in the real copy of std | 
 | #[cfg(test)] | 
 | use realstd::io::try_set_output_capture; | 
 |  | 
 | use crate::any::Any; | 
 | #[cfg(not(test))] | 
 | use crate::io::try_set_output_capture; | 
 | use crate::mem::{self, ManuallyDrop}; | 
 | use crate::panic::{BacktraceStyle, PanicHookInfo}; | 
 | use crate::sync::atomic::{Atomic, AtomicBool, Ordering}; | 
 | use crate::sync::{PoisonError, RwLock}; | 
 | use crate::sys::backtrace; | 
 | use crate::sys::stdio::panic_output; | 
 | use crate::{fmt, intrinsics, process, thread}; | 
 |  | 
 | // This forces codegen of the function called by panic!() inside the std crate, rather than in | 
 | // downstream crates. Primarily this is useful for rustc's codegen tests, which rely on noticing | 
 | // complete removal of panic from generated IR. Since begin_panic is inline(never), it's only | 
 | // codegen'd once per crate-graph so this pushes that to std rather than our codegen test crates. | 
 | // | 
 | // (See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123244 for more info on why). | 
 | // | 
 | // If this is causing problems we can also modify those codegen tests to use a crate type like | 
 | // cdylib which doesn't export "Rust" symbols to downstream linkage units. | 
 | #[unstable(feature = "libstd_sys_internals", reason = "used by the panic! macro", issue = "none")] | 
 | #[doc(hidden)] | 
 | #[allow(dead_code)] | 
 | #[used(compiler)] | 
 | pub static EMPTY_PANIC: fn(&'static str) -> ! = | 
 |     begin_panic::<&'static str> as fn(&'static str) -> !; | 
 |  | 
 | // Binary interface to the panic runtime that the standard library depends on. | 
 | // | 
 | // The standard library is tagged with `#![needs_panic_runtime]` (introduced in | 
 | // RFC 1513) to indicate that it requires some other crate tagged with | 
 | // `#![panic_runtime]` to exist somewhere. Each panic runtime is intended to | 
 | // implement these symbols (with the same signatures) so we can get matched up | 
 | // to them. | 
 | // | 
 | // One day this may look a little less ad-hoc with the compiler helping out to | 
 | // hook up these functions, but it is not this day! | 
 | #[allow(improper_ctypes)] | 
 | unsafe extern "C" { | 
 |     #[rustc_std_internal_symbol] | 
 |     fn __rust_panic_cleanup(payload: *mut u8) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send + 'static); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | unsafe extern "Rust" { | 
 |     /// `PanicPayload` lazily performs allocation only when needed (this avoids | 
 |     /// allocations when using the "abort" panic runtime). | 
 |     #[rustc_std_internal_symbol] | 
 |     fn __rust_start_panic(payload: &mut dyn PanicPayload) -> u32; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// This function is called by the panic runtime if FFI code catches a Rust | 
 | /// panic but doesn't rethrow it. We don't support this case since it messes | 
 | /// with our panic count. | 
 | #[cfg(not(test))] | 
 | #[rustc_std_internal_symbol] | 
 | extern "C" fn __rust_drop_panic() -> ! { | 
 |     rtabort!("Rust panics must be rethrown"); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// This function is called by the panic runtime if it catches an exception | 
 | /// object which does not correspond to a Rust panic. | 
 | #[cfg(not(test))] | 
 | #[rustc_std_internal_symbol] | 
 | extern "C" fn __rust_foreign_exception() -> ! { | 
 |     rtabort!("Rust cannot catch foreign exceptions"); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | #[derive(Default)] | 
 | enum Hook { | 
 |     #[default] | 
 |     Default, | 
 |     Custom(Box<dyn Fn(&PanicHookInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send>), | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | impl Hook { | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     fn into_box(self) -> Box<dyn Fn(&PanicHookInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send> { | 
 |         match self { | 
 |             Hook::Default => Box::new(default_hook), | 
 |             Hook::Custom(hook) => hook, | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static HOOK: RwLock<Hook> = RwLock::new(Hook::Default); | 
 |  | 
 | /// Registers a custom panic hook, replacing the previously registered hook. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The panic hook is invoked when a thread panics, but before the panic runtime | 
 | /// is invoked. As such, the hook will run with both the aborting and unwinding | 
 | /// runtimes. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The default hook, which is registered at startup, prints a message to standard error and | 
 | /// generates a backtrace if requested. This behavior can be customized using the `set_hook` function. | 
 | /// The current hook can be retrieved while reinstating the default hook with the [`take_hook`] | 
 | /// function. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// [`take_hook`]: ./fn.take_hook.html | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The hook is provided with a `PanicHookInfo` struct which contains information | 
 | /// about the origin of the panic, including the payload passed to `panic!` and | 
 | /// the source code location from which the panic originated. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The panic hook is a global resource. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Panics | 
 | /// | 
 | /// Panics if called from a panicking thread. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Examples | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The following will print "Custom panic hook": | 
 | /// | 
 | /// ```should_panic | 
 | /// use std::panic; | 
 | /// | 
 | /// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| { | 
 | ///     println!("Custom panic hook"); | 
 | /// })); | 
 | /// | 
 | /// panic!("Normal panic"); | 
 | /// ``` | 
 | #[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] | 
 | pub fn set_hook(hook: Box<dyn Fn(&PanicHookInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send>) { | 
 |     if thread::panicking() { | 
 |         panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     let new = Hook::Custom(hook); | 
 |     let mut hook = HOOK.write().unwrap_or_else(PoisonError::into_inner); | 
 |     let old = mem::replace(&mut *hook, new); | 
 |     drop(hook); | 
 |     // Only drop the old hook after releasing the lock to avoid deadlocking | 
 |     // if its destructor panics. | 
 |     drop(old); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Unregisters the current panic hook and returns it, registering the default hook | 
 | /// in its place. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// *See also the function [`set_hook`].* | 
 | /// | 
 | /// [`set_hook`]: ./fn.set_hook.html | 
 | /// | 
 | /// If the default hook is registered it will be returned, but remain registered. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Panics | 
 | /// | 
 | /// Panics if called from a panicking thread. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Examples | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The following will print "Normal panic": | 
 | /// | 
 | /// ```should_panic | 
 | /// use std::panic; | 
 | /// | 
 | /// panic::set_hook(Box::new(|_| { | 
 | ///     println!("Custom panic hook"); | 
 | /// })); | 
 | /// | 
 | /// let _ = panic::take_hook(); | 
 | /// | 
 | /// panic!("Normal panic"); | 
 | /// ``` | 
 | #[must_use] | 
 | #[stable(feature = "panic_hooks", since = "1.10.0")] | 
 | pub fn take_hook() -> Box<dyn Fn(&PanicHookInfo<'_>) + 'static + Sync + Send> { | 
 |     if thread::panicking() { | 
 |         panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     let mut hook = HOOK.write().unwrap_or_else(PoisonError::into_inner); | 
 |     let old_hook = mem::take(&mut *hook); | 
 |     drop(hook); | 
 |  | 
 |     old_hook.into_box() | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Atomic combination of [`take_hook`] and [`set_hook`]. Use this to replace the panic handler with | 
 | /// a new panic handler that does something and then executes the old handler. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// [`take_hook`]: ./fn.take_hook.html | 
 | /// [`set_hook`]: ./fn.set_hook.html | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Panics | 
 | /// | 
 | /// Panics if called from a panicking thread. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// # Examples | 
 | /// | 
 | /// The following will print the custom message, and then the normal output of panic. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// ```should_panic | 
 | /// #![feature(panic_update_hook)] | 
 | /// use std::panic; | 
 | /// | 
 | /// // Equivalent to | 
 | /// // let prev = panic::take_hook(); | 
 | /// // panic::set_hook(move |info| { | 
 | /// //     println!("..."); | 
 | /// //     prev(info); | 
 | /// // ); | 
 | /// panic::update_hook(move |prev, info| { | 
 | ///     println!("Print custom message and execute panic handler as usual"); | 
 | ///     prev(info); | 
 | /// }); | 
 | /// | 
 | /// panic!("Custom and then normal"); | 
 | /// ``` | 
 | #[unstable(feature = "panic_update_hook", issue = "92649")] | 
 | pub fn update_hook<F>(hook_fn: F) | 
 | where | 
 |     F: Fn(&(dyn Fn(&PanicHookInfo<'_>) + Send + Sync + 'static), &PanicHookInfo<'_>) | 
 |         + Sync | 
 |         + Send | 
 |         + 'static, | 
 | { | 
 |     if thread::panicking() { | 
 |         panic!("cannot modify the panic hook from a panicking thread"); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     let mut hook = HOOK.write().unwrap_or_else(PoisonError::into_inner); | 
 |     let prev = mem::take(&mut *hook).into_box(); | 
 |     *hook = Hook::Custom(Box::new(move |info| hook_fn(&prev, info))); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// The default panic handler. | 
 | #[optimize(size)] | 
 | fn default_hook(info: &PanicHookInfo<'_>) { | 
 |     // If this is a double panic, make sure that we print a backtrace | 
 |     // for this panic. Otherwise only print it if logging is enabled. | 
 |     let backtrace = if info.force_no_backtrace() { | 
 |         None | 
 |     } else if panic_count::get_count() >= 2 { | 
 |         BacktraceStyle::full() | 
 |     } else { | 
 |         crate::panic::get_backtrace_style() | 
 |     }; | 
 |  | 
 |     // The current implementation always returns `Some`. | 
 |     let location = info.location().unwrap(); | 
 |  | 
 |     let msg = payload_as_str(info.payload()); | 
 |  | 
 |     let write = #[optimize(size)] | 
 |     |err: &mut dyn crate::io::Write| { | 
 |         // Use a lock to prevent mixed output in multithreading context. | 
 |         // Some platforms also require it when printing a backtrace, like `SymFromAddr` on Windows. | 
 |         let mut lock = backtrace::lock(); | 
 |  | 
 |         thread::with_current_name(|name| { | 
 |             let name = name.unwrap_or("<unnamed>"); | 
 |  | 
 |             // Try to write the panic message to a buffer first to prevent other concurrent outputs | 
 |             // interleaving with it. | 
 |             let mut buffer = [0u8; 512]; | 
 |             let mut cursor = crate::io::Cursor::new(&mut buffer[..]); | 
 |  | 
 |             let write_msg = |dst: &mut dyn crate::io::Write| { | 
 |                 // We add a newline to ensure the panic message appears at the start of a line. | 
 |                 writeln!(dst, "\nthread '{name}' panicked at {location}:\n{msg}") | 
 |             }; | 
 |  | 
 |             if write_msg(&mut cursor).is_ok() { | 
 |                 let pos = cursor.position() as usize; | 
 |                 let _ = err.write_all(&buffer[0..pos]); | 
 |             } else { | 
 |                 // The message did not fit into the buffer, write it directly instead. | 
 |                 let _ = write_msg(err); | 
 |             }; | 
 |         }); | 
 |  | 
 |         static FIRST_PANIC: Atomic<bool> = AtomicBool::new(true); | 
 |  | 
 |         match backtrace { | 
 |             // SAFETY: we took out a lock just a second ago. | 
 |             Some(BacktraceStyle::Short) => { | 
 |                 drop(lock.print(err, crate::backtrace_rs::PrintFmt::Short)) | 
 |             } | 
 |             Some(BacktraceStyle::Full) => { | 
 |                 drop(lock.print(err, crate::backtrace_rs::PrintFmt::Full)) | 
 |             } | 
 |             Some(BacktraceStyle::Off) => { | 
 |                 if FIRST_PANIC.swap(false, Ordering::Relaxed) { | 
 |                     let _ = writeln!( | 
 |                         err, | 
 |                         "note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a \ | 
 |                              backtrace" | 
 |                     ); | 
 |                     if cfg!(miri) { | 
 |                         let _ = writeln!( | 
 |                             err, | 
 |                             "note: in Miri, you may have to set `MIRIFLAGS=-Zmiri-env-forward=RUST_BACKTRACE` \ | 
 |                                 for the environment variable to have an effect" | 
 |                         ); | 
 |                     } | 
 |                 } | 
 |             } | 
 |             // If backtraces aren't supported or are forced-off, do nothing. | 
 |             None => {} | 
 |         } | 
 |     }; | 
 |  | 
 |     if let Ok(Some(local)) = try_set_output_capture(None) { | 
 |         write(&mut *local.lock().unwrap_or_else(|e| e.into_inner())); | 
 |         try_set_output_capture(Some(local)).ok(); | 
 |     } else if let Some(mut out) = panic_output() { | 
 |         write(&mut out); | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | #[cfg(not(test))] | 
 | #[doc(hidden)] | 
 | #[cfg(feature = "panic_immediate_abort")] | 
 | #[unstable(feature = "update_panic_count", issue = "none")] | 
 | pub mod panic_count { | 
 |     /// A reason for forcing an immediate abort on panic. | 
 |     #[derive(Debug)] | 
 |     pub enum MustAbort { | 
 |         AlwaysAbort, | 
 |         PanicInHook, | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn increase(run_panic_hook: bool) -> Option<MustAbort> { | 
 |         None | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn finished_panic_hook() {} | 
 |  | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn decrease() {} | 
 |  | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn set_always_abort() {} | 
 |  | 
 |     // Disregards ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     #[must_use] | 
 |     pub fn get_count() -> usize { | 
 |         0 | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     #[must_use] | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn count_is_zero() -> bool { | 
 |         true | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | #[cfg(not(test))] | 
 | #[doc(hidden)] | 
 | #[cfg(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"))] | 
 | #[unstable(feature = "update_panic_count", issue = "none")] | 
 | pub mod panic_count { | 
 |     use crate::cell::Cell; | 
 |     use crate::sync::atomic::{Atomic, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; | 
 |  | 
 |     const ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG: usize = 1 << (usize::BITS - 1); | 
 |  | 
 |     /// A reason for forcing an immediate abort on panic. | 
 |     #[derive(Debug)] | 
 |     pub enum MustAbort { | 
 |         AlwaysAbort, | 
 |         PanicInHook, | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Panic count for the current thread and whether a panic hook is currently | 
 |     // being executed.. | 
 |     thread_local! { | 
 |         static LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT: Cell<(usize, bool)> = const { Cell::new((0, false)) } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Sum of panic counts from all threads. The purpose of this is to have | 
 |     // a fast path in `count_is_zero` (which is used by `panicking`). In any particular | 
 |     // thread, if that thread currently views `GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT` as being zero, | 
 |     // then `LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT` in that thread is zero. This invariant holds before | 
 |     // and after increase and decrease, but not necessarily during their execution. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // Additionally, the top bit of GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT (GLOBAL_ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG) | 
 |     // records whether panic::always_abort() has been called. This can only be | 
 |     // set, never cleared. | 
 |     // panic::always_abort() is usually called to prevent memory allocations done by | 
 |     // the panic handling in the child created by `libc::fork`. | 
 |     // Memory allocations performed in a child created with `libc::fork` are undefined | 
 |     // behavior in most operating systems. | 
 |     // Accessing LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT in a child created by `libc::fork` would lead to a memory | 
 |     // allocation. Only GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT can be accessed in this situation. This is | 
 |     // sufficient because a child process will always have exactly one thread only. | 
 |     // See also #85261 for details. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // This could be viewed as a struct containing a single bit and an n-1-bit | 
 |     // value, but if we wrote it like that it would be more than a single word, | 
 |     // and even a newtype around usize would be clumsy because we need atomics. | 
 |     // But we use such a tuple for the return type of increase(). | 
 |     // | 
 |     // Stealing a bit is fine because it just amounts to assuming that each | 
 |     // panicking thread consumes at least 2 bytes of address space. | 
 |     static GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT: Atomic<usize> = AtomicUsize::new(0); | 
 |  | 
 |     // Increases the global and local panic count, and returns whether an | 
 |     // immediate abort is required. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // This also updates thread-local state to keep track of whether a panic | 
 |     // hook is currently executing. | 
 |     pub fn increase(run_panic_hook: bool) -> Option<MustAbort> { | 
 |         let global_count = GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_add(1, Ordering::Relaxed); | 
 |         if global_count & ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG != 0 { | 
 |             // Do *not* access thread-local state, we might be after a `fork`. | 
 |             return Some(MustAbort::AlwaysAbort); | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| { | 
 |             let (count, in_panic_hook) = c.get(); | 
 |             if in_panic_hook { | 
 |                 return Some(MustAbort::PanicInHook); | 
 |             } | 
 |             c.set((count + 1, run_panic_hook)); | 
 |             None | 
 |         }) | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     pub fn finished_panic_hook() { | 
 |         LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| { | 
 |             let (count, _) = c.get(); | 
 |             c.set((count, false)); | 
 |         }); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     pub fn decrease() { | 
 |         GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_sub(1, Ordering::Relaxed); | 
 |         LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| { | 
 |             let (count, _) = c.get(); | 
 |             c.set((count - 1, false)); | 
 |         }); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     pub fn set_always_abort() { | 
 |         GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.fetch_or(ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG, Ordering::Relaxed); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Disregards ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG | 
 |     #[must_use] | 
 |     pub fn get_count() -> usize { | 
 |         LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| c.get().0) | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Disregards ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG | 
 |     #[must_use] | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     pub fn count_is_zero() -> bool { | 
 |         if GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT.load(Ordering::Relaxed) & !ALWAYS_ABORT_FLAG == 0 { | 
 |             // Fast path: if `GLOBAL_PANIC_COUNT` is zero, all threads | 
 |             // (including the current one) will have `LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT` | 
 |             // equal to zero, so TLS access can be avoided. | 
 |             // | 
 |             // In terms of performance, a relaxed atomic load is similar to a normal | 
 |             // aligned memory read (e.g., a mov instruction in x86), but with some | 
 |             // compiler optimization restrictions. On the other hand, a TLS access | 
 |             // might require calling a non-inlinable function (such as `__tls_get_addr` | 
 |             // when using the GD TLS model). | 
 |             true | 
 |         } else { | 
 |             is_zero_slow_path() | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Slow path is in a separate function to reduce the amount of code | 
 |     // inlined from `count_is_zero`. | 
 |     #[inline(never)] | 
 |     #[cold] | 
 |     fn is_zero_slow_path() -> bool { | 
 |         LOCAL_PANIC_COUNT.with(|c| c.get().0 == 0) | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | #[cfg(test)] | 
 | pub use realstd::rt::panic_count; | 
 |  | 
 | /// Invoke a closure, capturing the cause of an unwinding panic if one occurs. | 
 | #[cfg(feature = "panic_immediate_abort")] | 
 | pub unsafe fn catch_unwind<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> Result<R, Box<dyn Any + Send>> { | 
 |     Ok(f()) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Invoke a closure, capturing the cause of an unwinding panic if one occurs. | 
 | #[cfg(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"))] | 
 | pub unsafe fn catch_unwind<R, F: FnOnce() -> R>(f: F) -> Result<R, Box<dyn Any + Send>> { | 
 |     union Data<F, R> { | 
 |         f: ManuallyDrop<F>, | 
 |         r: ManuallyDrop<R>, | 
 |         p: ManuallyDrop<Box<dyn Any + Send>>, | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // We do some sketchy operations with ownership here for the sake of | 
 |     // performance. We can only pass pointers down to `do_call` (can't pass | 
 |     // objects by value), so we do all the ownership tracking here manually | 
 |     // using a union. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // We go through a transition where: | 
 |     // | 
 |     // * First, we set the data field `f` to be the argumentless closure that we're going to call. | 
 |     // * When we make the function call, the `do_call` function below, we take | 
 |     //   ownership of the function pointer. At this point the `data` union is | 
 |     //   entirely uninitialized. | 
 |     // * If the closure successfully returns, we write the return value into the | 
 |     //   data's return slot (field `r`). | 
 |     // * If the closure panics (`do_catch` below), we write the panic payload into field `p`. | 
 |     // * Finally, when we come back out of the `try` intrinsic we're | 
 |     //   in one of two states: | 
 |     // | 
 |     //      1. The closure didn't panic, in which case the return value was | 
 |     //         filled in. We move it out of `data.r` and return it. | 
 |     //      2. The closure panicked, in which case the panic payload was | 
 |     //         filled in. We move it out of `data.p` and return it. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // Once we stack all that together we should have the "most efficient' | 
 |     // method of calling a catch panic whilst juggling ownership. | 
 |     let mut data = Data { f: ManuallyDrop::new(f) }; | 
 |  | 
 |     let data_ptr = (&raw mut data) as *mut u8; | 
 |     // SAFETY: | 
 |     // | 
 |     // Access to the union's fields: this is `std` and we know that the `catch_unwind` | 
 |     // intrinsic fills in the `r` or `p` union field based on its return value. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // The call to `intrinsics::catch_unwind` is made safe by: | 
 |     // - `do_call`, the first argument, can be called with the initial `data_ptr`. | 
 |     // - `do_catch`, the second argument, can be called with the `data_ptr` as well. | 
 |     // See their safety preconditions for more information | 
 |     unsafe { | 
 |         return if intrinsics::catch_unwind(do_call::<F, R>, data_ptr, do_catch::<F, R>) == 0 { | 
 |             Ok(ManuallyDrop::into_inner(data.r)) | 
 |         } else { | 
 |             Err(ManuallyDrop::into_inner(data.p)) | 
 |         }; | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // We consider unwinding to be rare, so mark this function as cold. However, | 
 |     // do not mark it no-inline -- that decision is best to leave to the | 
 |     // optimizer (in most cases this function is not inlined even as a normal, | 
 |     // non-cold function, though, as of the writing of this comment). | 
 |     #[cold] | 
 |     #[optimize(size)] | 
 |     unsafe fn cleanup(payload: *mut u8) -> Box<dyn Any + Send + 'static> { | 
 |         // SAFETY: The whole unsafe block hinges on a correct implementation of | 
 |         // the panic handler `__rust_panic_cleanup`. As such we can only | 
 |         // assume it returns the correct thing for `Box::from_raw` to work | 
 |         // without undefined behavior. | 
 |         let obj = unsafe { Box::from_raw(__rust_panic_cleanup(payload)) }; | 
 |         panic_count::decrease(); | 
 |         obj | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // SAFETY: | 
 |     // data must be non-NUL, correctly aligned, and a pointer to a `Data<F, R>` | 
 |     // Its must contains a valid `f` (type: F) value that can be use to fill | 
 |     // `data.r`. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // This function cannot be marked as `unsafe` because `intrinsics::catch_unwind` | 
 |     // expects normal function pointers. | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     fn do_call<F: FnOnce() -> R, R>(data: *mut u8) { | 
 |         // SAFETY: this is the responsibility of the caller, see above. | 
 |         unsafe { | 
 |             let data = data as *mut Data<F, R>; | 
 |             let data = &mut (*data); | 
 |             let f = ManuallyDrop::take(&mut data.f); | 
 |             data.r = ManuallyDrop::new(f()); | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // We *do* want this part of the catch to be inlined: this allows the | 
 |     // compiler to properly track accesses to the Data union and optimize it | 
 |     // away most of the time. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // SAFETY: | 
 |     // data must be non-NUL, correctly aligned, and a pointer to a `Data<F, R>` | 
 |     // Since this uses `cleanup` it also hinges on a correct implementation of | 
 |     // `__rustc_panic_cleanup`. | 
 |     // | 
 |     // This function cannot be marked as `unsafe` because `intrinsics::catch_unwind` | 
 |     // expects normal function pointers. | 
 |     #[inline] | 
 |     #[rustc_nounwind] // `intrinsic::catch_unwind` requires catch fn to be nounwind | 
 |     fn do_catch<F: FnOnce() -> R, R>(data: *mut u8, payload: *mut u8) { | 
 |         // SAFETY: this is the responsibility of the caller, see above. | 
 |         // | 
 |         // When `__rustc_panic_cleaner` is correctly implemented we can rely | 
 |         // on `obj` being the correct thing to pass to `data.p` (after wrapping | 
 |         // in `ManuallyDrop`). | 
 |         unsafe { | 
 |             let data = data as *mut Data<F, R>; | 
 |             let data = &mut (*data); | 
 |             let obj = cleanup(payload); | 
 |             data.p = ManuallyDrop::new(obj); | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Determines whether the current thread is unwinding because of panic. | 
 | #[inline] | 
 | pub fn panicking() -> bool { | 
 |     !panic_count::count_is_zero() | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Entry point of panics from the core crate (`panic_impl` lang item). | 
 | #[cfg(not(any(test, doctest)))] | 
 | #[panic_handler] | 
 | pub fn begin_panic_handler(info: &core::panic::PanicInfo<'_>) -> ! { | 
 |     struct FormatStringPayload<'a> { | 
 |         inner: &'a core::panic::PanicMessage<'a>, | 
 |         string: Option<String>, | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     impl FormatStringPayload<'_> { | 
 |         fn fill(&mut self) -> &mut String { | 
 |             let inner = self.inner; | 
 |             // Lazily, the first time this gets called, run the actual string formatting. | 
 |             self.string.get_or_insert_with(|| { | 
 |                 let mut s = String::new(); | 
 |                 let mut fmt = fmt::Formatter::new(&mut s, fmt::FormattingOptions::new()); | 
 |                 let _err = fmt::Display::fmt(&inner, &mut fmt); | 
 |                 s | 
 |             }) | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     unsafe impl PanicPayload for FormatStringPayload<'_> { | 
 |         fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             // We do two allocations here, unfortunately. But (a) they're required with the current | 
 |             // scheme, and (b) we don't handle panic + OOM properly anyway (see comment in | 
 |             // begin_panic below). | 
 |             let contents = mem::take(self.fill()); | 
 |             Box::into_raw(Box::new(contents)) | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             self.fill() | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     impl fmt::Display for FormatStringPayload<'_> { | 
 |         fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
 |             if let Some(s) = &self.string { | 
 |                 f.write_str(s) | 
 |             } else { | 
 |                 fmt::Display::fmt(&self.inner, f) | 
 |             } | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     struct StaticStrPayload(&'static str); | 
 |  | 
 |     unsafe impl PanicPayload for StaticStrPayload { | 
 |         fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             Box::into_raw(Box::new(self.0)) | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             &self.0 | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         fn as_str(&mut self) -> Option<&str> { | 
 |             Some(self.0) | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     impl fmt::Display for StaticStrPayload { | 
 |         fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
 |             f.write_str(self.0) | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     let loc = info.location().unwrap(); // The current implementation always returns Some | 
 |     let msg = info.message(); | 
 |     crate::sys::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace(move || { | 
 |         if let Some(s) = msg.as_str() { | 
 |             rust_panic_with_hook( | 
 |                 &mut StaticStrPayload(s), | 
 |                 loc, | 
 |                 info.can_unwind(), | 
 |                 info.force_no_backtrace(), | 
 |             ); | 
 |         } else { | 
 |             rust_panic_with_hook( | 
 |                 &mut FormatStringPayload { inner: &msg, string: None }, | 
 |                 loc, | 
 |                 info.can_unwind(), | 
 |                 info.force_no_backtrace(), | 
 |             ); | 
 |         } | 
 |     }) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// This is the entry point of panicking for the non-format-string variants of | 
 | /// panic!() and assert!(). In particular, this is the only entry point that supports | 
 | /// arbitrary payloads, not just format strings. | 
 | #[unstable(feature = "libstd_sys_internals", reason = "used by the panic! macro", issue = "none")] | 
 | #[cfg_attr(not(any(test, doctest)), lang = "begin_panic")] | 
 | // lang item for CTFE panic support | 
 | // never inline unless panic_immediate_abort to avoid code | 
 | // bloat at the call sites as much as possible | 
 | #[cfg_attr(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"), inline(never), cold, optimize(size))] | 
 | #[cfg_attr(feature = "panic_immediate_abort", inline)] | 
 | #[track_caller] | 
 | #[rustc_do_not_const_check] // hooked by const-eval | 
 | pub const fn begin_panic<M: Any + Send>(msg: M) -> ! { | 
 |     if cfg!(feature = "panic_immediate_abort") { | 
 |         intrinsics::abort() | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     struct Payload<A> { | 
 |         inner: Option<A>, | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     unsafe impl<A: Send + 'static> PanicPayload for Payload<A> { | 
 |         fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             // Note that this should be the only allocation performed in this code path. Currently | 
 |             // this means that panic!() on OOM will invoke this code path, but then again we're not | 
 |             // really ready for panic on OOM anyway. If we do start doing this, then we should | 
 |             // propagate this allocation to be performed in the parent of this thread instead of the | 
 |             // thread that's panicking. | 
 |             let data = match self.inner.take() { | 
 |                 Some(a) => Box::new(a) as Box<dyn Any + Send>, | 
 |                 None => process::abort(), | 
 |             }; | 
 |             Box::into_raw(data) | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             match self.inner { | 
 |                 Some(ref a) => a, | 
 |                 None => process::abort(), | 
 |             } | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     impl<A: 'static> fmt::Display for Payload<A> { | 
 |         fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
 |             match &self.inner { | 
 |                 Some(a) => f.write_str(payload_as_str(a)), | 
 |                 None => process::abort(), | 
 |             } | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     let loc = Location::caller(); | 
 |     crate::sys::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace(move || { | 
 |         rust_panic_with_hook( | 
 |             &mut Payload { inner: Some(msg) }, | 
 |             loc, | 
 |             /* can_unwind */ true, | 
 |             /* force_no_backtrace */ false, | 
 |         ) | 
 |     }) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | fn payload_as_str(payload: &dyn Any) -> &str { | 
 |     if let Some(&s) = payload.downcast_ref::<&'static str>() { | 
 |         s | 
 |     } else if let Some(s) = payload.downcast_ref::<String>() { | 
 |         s.as_str() | 
 |     } else { | 
 |         "Box<dyn Any>" | 
 |     } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// Central point for dispatching panics. | 
 | /// | 
 | /// Executes the primary logic for a panic, including checking for recursive | 
 | /// panics, panic hooks, and finally dispatching to the panic runtime to either | 
 | /// abort or unwind. | 
 | #[optimize(size)] | 
 | fn rust_panic_with_hook( | 
 |     payload: &mut dyn PanicPayload, | 
 |     location: &Location<'_>, | 
 |     can_unwind: bool, | 
 |     force_no_backtrace: bool, | 
 | ) -> ! { | 
 |     let must_abort = panic_count::increase(true); | 
 |  | 
 |     // Check if we need to abort immediately. | 
 |     if let Some(must_abort) = must_abort { | 
 |         match must_abort { | 
 |             panic_count::MustAbort::PanicInHook => { | 
 |                 // Don't try to format the message in this case, perhaps that is causing the | 
 |                 // recursive panics. However if the message is just a string, no user-defined | 
 |                 // code is involved in printing it, so that is risk-free. | 
 |                 let message: &str = payload.as_str().unwrap_or_default(); | 
 |                 rtprintpanic!( | 
 |                     "panicked at {location}:\n{message}\nthread panicked while processing panic. aborting.\n" | 
 |                 ); | 
 |             } | 
 |             panic_count::MustAbort::AlwaysAbort => { | 
 |                 // Unfortunately, this does not print a backtrace, because creating | 
 |                 // a `Backtrace` will allocate, which we must avoid here. | 
 |                 rtprintpanic!("aborting due to panic at {location}:\n{payload}\n"); | 
 |             } | 
 |         } | 
 |         crate::sys::abort_internal(); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     match *HOOK.read().unwrap_or_else(PoisonError::into_inner) { | 
 |         // Some platforms (like wasm) know that printing to stderr won't ever actually | 
 |         // print anything, and if that's the case we can skip the default | 
 |         // hook. Since string formatting happens lazily when calling `payload` | 
 |         // methods, this means we avoid formatting the string at all! | 
 |         // (The panic runtime might still call `payload.take_box()` though and trigger | 
 |         // formatting.) | 
 |         Hook::Default if panic_output().is_none() => {} | 
 |         Hook::Default => { | 
 |             default_hook(&PanicHookInfo::new( | 
 |                 location, | 
 |                 payload.get(), | 
 |                 can_unwind, | 
 |                 force_no_backtrace, | 
 |             )); | 
 |         } | 
 |         Hook::Custom(ref hook) => { | 
 |             hook(&PanicHookInfo::new(location, payload.get(), can_unwind, force_no_backtrace)); | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     // Indicate that we have finished executing the panic hook. After this point | 
 |     // it is fine if there is a panic while executing destructors, as long as it | 
 |     // it contained within a `catch_unwind`. | 
 |     panic_count::finished_panic_hook(); | 
 |  | 
 |     if !can_unwind { | 
 |         // If a thread panics while running destructors or tries to unwind | 
 |         // through a nounwind function (e.g. extern "C") then we cannot continue | 
 |         // unwinding and have to abort immediately. | 
 |         rtprintpanic!("thread caused non-unwinding panic. aborting.\n"); | 
 |         crate::sys::abort_internal(); | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     rust_panic(payload) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// This is the entry point for `resume_unwind`. | 
 | /// It just forwards the payload to the panic runtime. | 
 | #[cfg_attr(feature = "panic_immediate_abort", inline)] | 
 | pub fn rust_panic_without_hook(payload: Box<dyn Any + Send>) -> ! { | 
 |     panic_count::increase(false); | 
 |  | 
 |     struct RewrapBox(Box<dyn Any + Send>); | 
 |  | 
 |     unsafe impl PanicPayload for RewrapBox { | 
 |         fn take_box(&mut self) -> *mut (dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             Box::into_raw(mem::replace(&mut self.0, Box::new(()))) | 
 |         } | 
 |  | 
 |         fn get(&mut self) -> &(dyn Any + Send) { | 
 |             &*self.0 | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     impl fmt::Display for RewrapBox { | 
 |         fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { | 
 |             f.write_str(payload_as_str(&self.0)) | 
 |         } | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     rust_panic(&mut RewrapBox(payload)) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /// An unmangled function (through `rustc_std_internal_symbol`) on which to slap | 
 | /// yer breakpoints. | 
 | #[inline(never)] | 
 | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_std_internal_symbol)] | 
 | #[cfg(not(feature = "panic_immediate_abort"))] | 
 | fn rust_panic(msg: &mut dyn PanicPayload) -> ! { | 
 |     let code = unsafe { __rust_start_panic(msg) }; | 
 |     rtabort!("failed to initiate panic, error {code}") | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | #[cfg_attr(not(test), rustc_std_internal_symbol)] | 
 | #[cfg(feature = "panic_immediate_abort")] | 
 | fn rust_panic(_: &mut dyn PanicPayload) -> ! { | 
 |     unsafe { | 
 |         crate::intrinsics::abort(); | 
 |     } | 
 | } |