nasm/asm/error.c
H. Peter Anvin 6a4353c4c2 errors: be more robust in handling unexpected fatal errors
Introduce a new error level, ERR_CRITICAL, beyond which we will
minimize the amount of code that will be executed before we die; in
particular don't execute any memory allocations, and if we somehow end
up recursing, abort() immediately.

Basically, "less than panic, more than fatal."

At this point this level is used by nasm_alloc_failed().

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
2019-08-28 18:32:46 -07:00

291 lines
8.0 KiB
C

/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- *
*
* Copyright 1996-2019 The NASM Authors - All Rights Reserved
* See the file AUTHORS included with the NASM distribution for
* the specific copyright holders.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following
* conditions are met:
*
* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided
* with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND
* CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
* INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
* DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR
* CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
* SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
* LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
* OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE,
* EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* ----------------------------------------------------------------------- */
/*
* error.c - error message handling routines for the assembler
*/
#include "compiler.h"
#include "nasmlib.h"
#include "error.h"
/*
* Global error handling function. If we call this before it is
* initialized, it is a fatal error!
*/
vefunc nasm_verror = (vefunc)nasm_verror_critical;
/* Common function body */
#define nasm_do_error(_sev,_flags) \
va_list ap; \
va_start(ap, fmt); \
if ((_sev) >= ERR_CRITICAL) \
nasm_verror_critical((_sev)|(_flags), fmt, ap); \
else \
nasm_verror((_sev)|(_flags), fmt, ap); \
va_end(ap); \
if ((_sev) >= ERR_FATAL) \
abort();
void nasm_error(errflags severity, const char *fmt, ...)
{
nasm_do_error(severity & ERR_MASK, severity & ~ERR_MASK);
}
#define nasm_err_helpers(_type, _name, _sev) \
_type nasm_ ## _name ## f (errflags flags, const char *fmt, ...) \
{ \
nasm_do_error(_sev, flags); \
} \
_type nasm_ ## _name (const char *fmt, ...) \
{ \
nasm_do_error(_sev, 0); \
}
nasm_err_helpers(void, listmsg, ERR_LISTMSG)
nasm_err_helpers(void, debug, ERR_DEBUG)
nasm_err_helpers(void, info, ERR_INFO)
nasm_err_helpers(void, nonfatal, ERR_NONFATAL)
nasm_err_helpers(fatal_func, fatal, ERR_FATAL)
nasm_err_helpers(fatal_func, critical, ERR_CRITICAL)
nasm_err_helpers(fatal_func, panic, ERR_PANIC)
/*
* Strongly discourage warnings without level by require flags on warnings.
* This means nasm_warn() is the equivalent of the -f variants of the
* other ones.
*/
void nasm_warn(errflags flags, const char *fmt, ...)
{
nasm_do_error(ERR_WARNING, flags);
}
fatal_func nasm_panic_from_macro(const char *file, int line)
{
nasm_panic("internal error at %s:%d\n", file, line);
}
fatal_func nasm_assert_failed(const char *file, int line, const char *msg)
{
nasm_panic("assertion %s failed at %s:%d", msg, file, line);
}
/*
* Warning stack management. Note that there is an implicit "push"
* after the command line has been parsed, but this particular push
* cannot be popped.
*/
struct warning_stack {
struct warning_stack *next;
uint8_t state[sizeof warning_state];
};
static struct warning_stack *warning_stack, *warning_state_init;
/* Push the warning status onto the warning stack */
void push_warnings(void)
{
struct warning_stack *ws;
ws = nasm_malloc(sizeof *ws);
memcpy(ws->state, warning_state, sizeof warning_state);
ws->next = warning_stack;
warning_stack = ws;
}
/* Pop the warning status off the warning stack */
void pop_warnings(void)
{
struct warning_stack *ws = warning_stack;
memcpy(warning_state, ws->state, sizeof warning_state);
if (!ws->next) {
/*!
*!warn-stack-empty [on] warning stack empty
*! a [WARNING POP] directive was executed when
*! the warning stack is empty. This is treated
*! as a [WARNING *all] directive.
*/
nasm_warn(WARN_WARN_STACK_EMPTY, "warning stack empty");
} else {
warning_stack = ws->next;
nasm_free(ws);
}
}
/* Call after the command line is parsed, but before the first pass */
void init_warnings(void)
{
push_warnings();
warning_state_init = warning_stack;
}
/* Call after each pass */
void reset_warnings(void)
{
struct warning_stack *ws = warning_stack;
/* Unwind the warning stack. We do NOT delete the last entry! */
while (ws->next) {
struct warning_stack *wst = ws;
ws = ws->next;
nasm_free(wst);
}
warning_stack = ws;
memcpy(warning_state, ws->state, sizeof warning_state);
}
/*
* This is called when processing a -w or -W option, or a warning directive.
* Returns on if if the action was successful.
*
* Special pseudo-warnings:
*
*!other [on] any warning not specifially mentioned above
*! specifies any warning not included in any specific warning class.
*
*!all [all] all possible warnings
*! is an group alias for \e{all} warning classes. Thus, \c{-w+all}
*! enables all available warnings, and \c{-w-all} disables warnings
*! entirely (since NASM 2.13).
*/
bool set_warning_status(const char *value)
{
enum warn_action { WID_OFF, WID_ON, WID_RESET };
enum warn_action action;
const struct warning_alias *wa;
size_t vlen;
bool ok = false;
uint8_t mask;
value = nasm_skip_spaces(value);
switch (*value) {
case '-':
action = WID_OFF;
value++;
break;
case '+':
action = WID_ON;
value++;
break;
case '*':
action = WID_RESET;
value++;
break;
case 'N':
case 'n':
if (!nasm_strnicmp(value, "no-", 3)) {
action = WID_OFF;
value += 3;
break;
} else if (!nasm_stricmp(value, "none")) {
action = WID_OFF;
value = NULL;
break;
}
/* else fall through */
default:
action = WID_ON;
break;
}
mask = WARN_ST_ENABLED;
if (value && !nasm_strnicmp(value, "error", 5)) {
switch (value[5]) {
case '=':
mask = WARN_ST_ERROR;
value += 6;
break;
case '\0':
mask = WARN_ST_ERROR;
value = NULL;
break;
default:
/* Just an accidental prefix? */
break;
}
}
if (value && !nasm_stricmp(value, "all"))
value = NULL;
vlen = value ? strlen(value) : 0;
/* This is inefficient, but it shouldn't matter... */
for (wa = warning_alias; wa < &warning_alias[NUM_WARNING_ALIAS]; wa++) {
enum warn_index i = wa->warning;
if (value) {
char sep;
if (nasm_strnicmp(value, wa->name, vlen))
continue; /* Not a prefix */
sep = wa->name[vlen];
if (sep != '\0' && sep != '-')
continue; /* Not a valid prefix */
}
ok = true; /* At least one action taken */
switch (action) {
case WID_OFF:
warning_state[i] &= ~mask;
break;
case WID_ON:
warning_state[i] |= mask;
break;
case WID_RESET:
warning_state[i] &= ~mask;
warning_state[i] |= warning_state_init->state[i] & mask;
break;
}
}
if (!ok && value) {
/*!
*!unknown-warning [off] unknown warning in -W/-w or warning directive
*! warns about a \c{-w} or \c{-W} option or a \c{[WARNING]} directive
*! that contains an unknown warning name or is otherwise not possible to process.
*/
nasm_warn(WARN_UNKNOWN_WARNING, "unknown warning name: %s", value);
}
return ok;
}