Make the error-handling functions thread-safe.

Prior to this change, error handling functions must be installed
and removed only inside of an llvm_[start/stop]_multithreading
pair.  This change allows error handling functions to be installed
any time, and from any thread.

Reviewed by: chandlerc

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4140

llvm-svn: 210937
This commit is contained in:
Zachary Turner 2014-06-13 21:20:44 +00:00
parent 36b8067317
commit 586fd74c30
2 changed files with 19 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -30,9 +30,6 @@ namespace llvm {
/// install_fatal_error_handler - Installs a new error handler to be used
/// whenever a serious (non-recoverable) error is encountered by LLVM.
///
/// If you are using llvm_start_multithreaded, you should register the handler
/// before doing that.
///
/// If no error handler is installed the default is to print the error message
/// to stderr, and call exit(1). If an error handler is installed then it is
/// the handler's responsibility to log the message, it will no longer be
@ -50,8 +47,6 @@ namespace llvm {
void *user_data = nullptr);
/// Restores default error handling behaviour.
/// This must not be called between llvm_start_multithreaded() and
/// llvm_stop_multithreaded().
void remove_fatal_error_handler();
/// ScopedFatalErrorHandler - This is a simple helper class which just

View File

@ -19,6 +19,8 @@
#include "llvm/Config/config.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Debug.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Signals.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Mutex.h"
#include "llvm/Support/MutexGuard.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Threading.h"
#include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
#include <cassert>
@ -37,17 +39,20 @@ using namespace llvm;
static fatal_error_handler_t ErrorHandler = nullptr;
static void *ErrorHandlerUserData = nullptr;
static sys::Mutex ErrorHandlerMutex;
void llvm::install_fatal_error_handler(fatal_error_handler_t handler,
void *user_data) {
assert(!llvm_is_multithreaded() &&
"Cannot register error handlers after starting multithreaded mode!\n");
llvm::MutexGuard Lock(ErrorHandlerMutex);
assert(!ErrorHandler && "Error handler already registered!\n");
ErrorHandler = handler;
ErrorHandlerUserData = user_data;
}
void llvm::remove_fatal_error_handler() {
llvm::MutexGuard Lock(ErrorHandlerMutex);
ErrorHandler = nullptr;
ErrorHandlerUserData = nullptr;
}
void llvm::report_fatal_error(const char *Reason, bool GenCrashDiag) {
@ -63,8 +68,18 @@ void llvm::report_fatal_error(StringRef Reason, bool GenCrashDiag) {
}
void llvm::report_fatal_error(const Twine &Reason, bool GenCrashDiag) {
if (ErrorHandler) {
ErrorHandler(ErrorHandlerUserData, Reason.str(), GenCrashDiag);
llvm::fatal_error_handler_t handler = nullptr;
void* handlerData = nullptr;
{
// Only acquire the mutex while reading the handler, so as not to invoke a
// user-supplied callback under a lock.
llvm::MutexGuard Lock(ErrorHandlerMutex);
handler = ErrorHandler;
handlerData = ErrorHandlerUserData;
}
if (handler) {
handler(handlerData, Reason.str(), GenCrashDiag);
} else {
// Blast the result out to stderr. We don't try hard to make sure this
// succeeds (e.g. handling EINTR) and we can't use errs() here because