From 1b6a04ca5504955c571d1c97504fb45ea0befee4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Valentin Popov Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2024 01:21:28 +0400 Subject: Initial vendor packages Signed-off-by: Valentin Popov --- vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs | 485 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 485 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs (limited to 'vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs') diff --git a/vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs b/vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a7c1995 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/backtrace/src/symbolize/mod.rs @@ -0,0 +1,485 @@ +use core::{fmt, str}; + +cfg_if::cfg_if! { + if #[cfg(feature = "std")] { + use std::path::Path; + use std::prelude::v1::*; + } +} + +use super::backtrace::Frame; +use super::types::BytesOrWideString; +use core::ffi::c_void; +use rustc_demangle::{try_demangle, Demangle}; + +/// Resolve an address to a symbol, passing the symbol to the specified +/// closure. +/// +/// This function will look up the given address in areas such as the local +/// symbol table, dynamic symbol table, or DWARF debug info (depending on the +/// activated implementation) to find symbols to yield. +/// +/// The closure may not be called if resolution could not be performed, and it +/// also may be called more than once in the case of inlined functions. +/// +/// Symbols yielded represent the execution at the specified `addr`, returning +/// file/line pairs for that address (if available). +/// +/// Note that if you have a `Frame` then it's recommended to use the +/// `resolve_frame` function instead of this one. +/// +/// # Required features +/// +/// This function requires the `std` feature of the `backtrace` crate to be +/// enabled, and the `std` feature is enabled by default. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// This function strives to never panic, but if the `cb` provided panics then +/// some platforms will force a double panic to abort the process. Some +/// platforms use a C library which internally uses callbacks which cannot be +/// unwound through, so panicking from `cb` may trigger a process abort. +/// +/// # Example +/// +/// ``` +/// extern crate backtrace; +/// +/// fn main() { +/// backtrace::trace(|frame| { +/// let ip = frame.ip(); +/// +/// backtrace::resolve(ip, |symbol| { +/// // ... +/// }); +/// +/// false // only look at the top frame +/// }); +/// } +/// ``` +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +pub fn resolve(addr: *mut c_void, cb: F) { + let _guard = crate::lock::lock(); + unsafe { resolve_unsynchronized(addr, cb) } +} + +/// Resolve a previously capture frame to a symbol, passing the symbol to the +/// specified closure. +/// +/// This function performs the same function as `resolve` except that it takes a +/// `Frame` as an argument instead of an address. This can allow some platform +/// implementations of backtracing to provide more accurate symbol information +/// or information about inline frames for example. It's recommended to use this +/// if you can. +/// +/// # Required features +/// +/// This function requires the `std` feature of the `backtrace` crate to be +/// enabled, and the `std` feature is enabled by default. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// This function strives to never panic, but if the `cb` provided panics then +/// some platforms will force a double panic to abort the process. Some +/// platforms use a C library which internally uses callbacks which cannot be +/// unwound through, so panicking from `cb` may trigger a process abort. +/// +/// # Example +/// +/// ``` +/// extern crate backtrace; +/// +/// fn main() { +/// backtrace::trace(|frame| { +/// backtrace::resolve_frame(frame, |symbol| { +/// // ... +/// }); +/// +/// false // only look at the top frame +/// }); +/// } +/// ``` +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +pub fn resolve_frame(frame: &Frame, cb: F) { + let _guard = crate::lock::lock(); + unsafe { resolve_frame_unsynchronized(frame, cb) } +} + +pub enum ResolveWhat<'a> { + Address(*mut c_void), + Frame(&'a Frame), +} + +impl<'a> ResolveWhat<'a> { + #[allow(dead_code)] + fn address_or_ip(&self) -> *mut c_void { + match self { + ResolveWhat::Address(a) => adjust_ip(*a), + ResolveWhat::Frame(f) => adjust_ip(f.ip()), + } + } +} + +// IP values from stack frames are typically (always?) the instruction +// *after* the call that's the actual stack trace. Symbolizing this on +// causes the filename/line number to be one ahead and perhaps into +// the void if it's near the end of the function. +// +// This appears to basically always be the case on all platforms, so we always +// subtract one from a resolved ip to resolve it to the previous call +// instruction instead of the instruction being returned to. +// +// Ideally we would not do this. Ideally we would require callers of the +// `resolve` APIs here to manually do the -1 and account that they want location +// information for the *previous* instruction, not the current. Ideally we'd +// also expose on `Frame` if we are indeed the address of the next instruction +// or the current. +// +// For now though this is a pretty niche concern so we just internally always +// subtract one. Consumers should keep working and getting pretty good results, +// so we should be good enough. +fn adjust_ip(a: *mut c_void) -> *mut c_void { + if a.is_null() { + a + } else { + (a as usize - 1) as *mut c_void + } +} + +/// Same as `resolve`, only unsafe as it's unsynchronized. +/// +/// This function does not have synchronization guarantees but is available when +/// the `std` feature of this crate isn't compiled in. See the `resolve` +/// function for more documentation and examples. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// See information on `resolve` for caveats on `cb` panicking. +pub unsafe fn resolve_unsynchronized(addr: *mut c_void, mut cb: F) +where + F: FnMut(&Symbol), +{ + imp::resolve(ResolveWhat::Address(addr), &mut cb) +} + +/// Same as `resolve_frame`, only unsafe as it's unsynchronized. +/// +/// This function does not have synchronization guarantees but is available +/// when the `std` feature of this crate isn't compiled in. See the +/// `resolve_frame` function for more documentation and examples. +/// +/// # Panics +/// +/// See information on `resolve_frame` for caveats on `cb` panicking. +pub unsafe fn resolve_frame_unsynchronized(frame: &Frame, mut cb: F) +where + F: FnMut(&Symbol), +{ + imp::resolve(ResolveWhat::Frame(frame), &mut cb) +} + +/// A trait representing the resolution of a symbol in a file. +/// +/// This trait is yielded as a trait object to the closure given to the +/// `backtrace::resolve` function, and it is virtually dispatched as it's +/// unknown which implementation is behind it. +/// +/// A symbol can give contextual information about a function, for example the +/// name, filename, line number, precise address, etc. Not all information is +/// always available in a symbol, however, so all methods return an `Option`. +pub struct Symbol { + // TODO: this lifetime bound needs to be persisted eventually to `Symbol`, + // but that's currently a breaking change. For now this is safe since + // `Symbol` is only ever handed out by reference and can't be cloned. + inner: imp::Symbol<'static>, +} + +impl Symbol { + /// Returns the name of this function. + /// + /// The returned structure can be used to query various properties about the + /// symbol name: + /// + /// * The `Display` implementation will print out the demangled symbol. + /// * The raw `str` value of the symbol can be accessed (if it's valid + /// utf-8). + /// * The raw bytes for the symbol name can be accessed. + pub fn name(&self) -> Option> { + self.inner.name() + } + + /// Returns the starting address of this function. + pub fn addr(&self) -> Option<*mut c_void> { + self.inner.addr().map(|p| p as *mut _) + } + + /// Returns the raw filename as a slice. This is mainly useful for `no_std` + /// environments. + pub fn filename_raw(&self) -> Option> { + self.inner.filename_raw() + } + + /// Returns the column number for where this symbol is currently executing. + /// + /// Only gimli currently provides a value here and even then only if `filename` + /// returns `Some`, and so it is then consequently subject to similar caveats. + pub fn colno(&self) -> Option { + self.inner.colno() + } + + /// Returns the line number for where this symbol is currently executing. + /// + /// This return value is typically `Some` if `filename` returns `Some`, and + /// is consequently subject to similar caveats. + pub fn lineno(&self) -> Option { + self.inner.lineno() + } + + /// Returns the file name where this function was defined. + /// + /// This is currently only available when libbacktrace or gimli is being + /// used (e.g. unix platforms other) and when a binary is compiled with + /// debuginfo. If neither of these conditions is met then this will likely + /// return `None`. + /// + /// # Required features + /// + /// This function requires the `std` feature of the `backtrace` crate to be + /// enabled, and the `std` feature is enabled by default. + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + #[allow(unreachable_code)] + pub fn filename(&self) -> Option<&Path> { + self.inner.filename() + } +} + +impl fmt::Debug for Symbol { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + let mut d = f.debug_struct("Symbol"); + if let Some(name) = self.name() { + d.field("name", &name); + } + if let Some(addr) = self.addr() { + d.field("addr", &addr); + } + + #[cfg(feature = "std")] + { + if let Some(filename) = self.filename() { + d.field("filename", &filename); + } + } + + if let Some(lineno) = self.lineno() { + d.field("lineno", &lineno); + } + d.finish() + } +} + +cfg_if::cfg_if! { + if #[cfg(feature = "cpp_demangle")] { + // Maybe a parsed C++ symbol, if parsing the mangled symbol as Rust + // failed. + struct OptionCppSymbol<'a>(Option<::cpp_demangle::BorrowedSymbol<'a>>); + + impl<'a> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + fn parse(input: &'a [u8]) -> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + OptionCppSymbol(::cpp_demangle::BorrowedSymbol::new(input).ok()) + } + + fn none() -> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + OptionCppSymbol(None) + } + } + } else { + use core::marker::PhantomData; + + // Make sure to keep this zero-sized, so that the `cpp_demangle` feature + // has no cost when disabled. + struct OptionCppSymbol<'a>(PhantomData<&'a ()>); + + impl<'a> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + fn parse(_: &'a [u8]) -> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + OptionCppSymbol(PhantomData) + } + + fn none() -> OptionCppSymbol<'a> { + OptionCppSymbol(PhantomData) + } + } + } +} + +/// A wrapper around a symbol name to provide ergonomic accessors to the +/// demangled name, the raw bytes, the raw string, etc. +// Allow dead code for when the `cpp_demangle` feature is not enabled. +#[allow(dead_code)] +pub struct SymbolName<'a> { + bytes: &'a [u8], + demangled: Option>, + cpp_demangled: OptionCppSymbol<'a>, +} + +impl<'a> SymbolName<'a> { + /// Creates a new symbol name from the raw underlying bytes. + pub fn new(bytes: &'a [u8]) -> SymbolName<'a> { + let str_bytes = str::from_utf8(bytes).ok(); + let demangled = str_bytes.and_then(|s| try_demangle(s).ok()); + + let cpp = if demangled.is_none() { + OptionCppSymbol::parse(bytes) + } else { + OptionCppSymbol::none() + }; + + SymbolName { + bytes: bytes, + demangled: demangled, + cpp_demangled: cpp, + } + } + + /// Returns the raw (mangled) symbol name as a `str` if the symbol is valid utf-8. + /// + /// Use the `Display` implementation if you want the demangled version. + pub fn as_str(&self) -> Option<&'a str> { + self.demangled + .as_ref() + .map(|s| s.as_str()) + .or_else(|| str::from_utf8(self.bytes).ok()) + } + + /// Returns the raw symbol name as a list of bytes + pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &'a [u8] { + self.bytes + } +} + +fn format_symbol_name( + fmt: fn(&str, &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result, + mut bytes: &[u8], + f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>, +) -> fmt::Result { + while bytes.len() > 0 { + match str::from_utf8(bytes) { + Ok(name) => { + fmt(name, f)?; + break; + } + Err(err) => { + fmt("\u{FFFD}", f)?; + + match err.error_len() { + Some(len) => bytes = &bytes[err.valid_up_to() + len..], + None => break, + } + } + } + } + Ok(()) +} + +cfg_if::cfg_if! { + if #[cfg(feature = "cpp_demangle")] { + impl<'a> fmt::Display for SymbolName<'a> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + if let Some(ref s) = self.demangled { + s.fmt(f) + } else if let Some(ref cpp) = self.cpp_demangled.0 { + cpp.fmt(f) + } else { + format_symbol_name(fmt::Display::fmt, self.bytes, f) + } + } + } + } else { + impl<'a> fmt::Display for SymbolName<'a> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + if let Some(ref s) = self.demangled { + s.fmt(f) + } else { + format_symbol_name(fmt::Display::fmt, self.bytes, f) + } + } + } + } +} + +cfg_if::cfg_if! { + if #[cfg(all(feature = "std", feature = "cpp_demangle"))] { + impl<'a> fmt::Debug for SymbolName<'a> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + use std::fmt::Write; + + if let Some(ref s) = self.demangled { + return s.fmt(f) + } + + // This may to print if the demangled symbol isn't actually + // valid, so handle the error here gracefully by not propagating + // it outwards. + if let Some(ref cpp) = self.cpp_demangled.0 { + let mut s = String::new(); + if write!(s, "{}", cpp).is_ok() { + return s.fmt(f) + } + } + + format_symbol_name(fmt::Debug::fmt, self.bytes, f) + } + } + } else { + impl<'a> fmt::Debug for SymbolName<'a> { + fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { + if let Some(ref s) = self.demangled { + s.fmt(f) + } else { + format_symbol_name(fmt::Debug::fmt, self.bytes, f) + } + } + } + } +} + +/// Attempt to reclaim that cached memory used to symbolicate addresses. +/// +/// This method will attempt to release any global data structures that have +/// otherwise been cached globally or in the thread which typically represent +/// parsed DWARF information or similar. +/// +/// # Caveats +/// +/// While this function is always available it doesn't actually do anything on +/// most implementations. Libraries like dbghelp or libbacktrace do not provide +/// facilities to deallocate state and manage the allocated memory. For now the +/// `gimli-symbolize` feature of this crate is the only feature where this +/// function has any effect. +#[cfg(feature = "std")] +pub fn clear_symbol_cache() { + let _guard = crate::lock::lock(); + unsafe { + imp::clear_symbol_cache(); + } +} + +cfg_if::cfg_if! { + if #[cfg(miri)] { + mod miri; + use miri as imp; + } else if #[cfg(all(windows, target_env = "msvc", not(target_vendor = "uwp")))] { + mod dbghelp; + use dbghelp as imp; + } else if #[cfg(all( + any(unix, all(windows, target_env = "gnu")), + not(target_vendor = "uwp"), + not(target_os = "emscripten"), + any(not(backtrace_in_libstd), feature = "backtrace"), + ))] { + mod gimli; + use gimli as imp; + } else { + mod noop; + use noop as imp; + } +} -- cgit v1.2.3