1 | \chapter{Exception Features}
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2 | \label{c:features}
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3 |
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4 | This chapter covers the design and user interface of the \CFA EHM
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5 | and begins with a general overview of EHMs. It is not a strict
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6 | definition of all EHMs nor an exhaustive list of all possible features.
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7 | However, it does cover the most common structure and features found in them.
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8 |
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9 | \section{Overview of EHMs}
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10 | % We should cover what is an exception handling mechanism and what is an
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11 | % exception before this. Probably in the introduction. Some of this could
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12 | % move there.
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13 | \subsection{Raise / Handle}
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14 | An exception operation has two main parts: raise and handle.
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15 | These terms are sometimes known as throw and catch but this work uses
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16 | throw/catch as a particular kind of raise/handle.
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17 | These are the two parts that the user writes and may
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18 | be the only two pieces of the EHM that have any syntax in a language.
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19 |
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20 | \paragraph{Raise}
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21 | The raise is the starting point for exception handling,
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22 | by raising an exception, which passes it to
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23 | the EHM.
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24 |
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25 | Some well known examples include the @throw@ statements of \Cpp and Java and
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26 | the \code{Python}{raise} statement of Python. In real systems, a raise may
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27 | perform some other work (such as memory management) but for the
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28 | purposes of this overview that can be ignored.
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29 |
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30 | \paragraph{Handle}
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31 | The primary purpose of an EHM is to run some user code to handle a raised
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32 | exception. This code is given, along with some other information,
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33 | in a handler.
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34 |
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35 | A handler has three common features: the previously mentioned user code, a
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36 | region of code it guards and an exception label/condition that matches
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37 | against the raised exception.
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38 | Only raises inside the guarded region and raising exceptions that match the
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39 | label can be handled by a given handler.
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40 | If multiple handlers could can handle an exception,
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41 | EHMs define a rule to pick one, such as ``best match" or ``first found".
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42 |
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43 | The @try@ statements of \Cpp, Java and Python are common examples. All three
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44 | also show another common feature of handlers: they are grouped by the guarded
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45 | region.
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46 |
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47 | \subsection{Propagation}
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48 | After an exception is raised comes what is usually the biggest step for the
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49 | EHM: finding and setting up the handler for execution.
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50 | The propagation from raise to
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51 | handler can be broken up into three different tasks: searching for a handler,
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52 | matching against the handler and installing the handler.
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53 |
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54 | \paragraph{Searching}
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55 | The EHM begins by searching for handlers that might be used to handle
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56 | the exception.
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57 | The search will find handlers that have the raise site in their guarded
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58 | region.
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59 | The search includes handlers in the current function, as well as any in
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60 | callers on the stack that have the function call in their guarded region.
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61 |
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62 | \paragraph{Matching}
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63 | Each handler found is with the raised exception. The exception
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64 | label defines a condition that is used with the exception and decides if
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65 | there is a match or not.
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66 | %
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67 | In languages where the first match is used, this step is intertwined with
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68 | searching; a match check is performed immediately after the search finds
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69 | a handler.
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70 |
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71 | \paragraph{Installing}
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72 | After a handler is chosen, it must be made ready to run.
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73 | The implementation can vary widely to fit with the rest of the
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74 | design of the EHM. The installation step might be trivial or it could be
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75 | the most expensive step in handling an exception. The latter tends to be the
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76 | case when stack unwinding is involved.
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77 |
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78 | If a matching handler is not guaranteed to be found, the EHM needs a
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79 | different course of action for this case.
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80 | This situation only occurs with unchecked exceptions as checked exceptions
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81 | (such as in Java) can make the guarantee.
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82 | The unhandled action is usually very general, such as aborting the program.
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83 |
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84 | \paragraph{Hierarchy}
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85 | A common way to organize exceptions is in a hierarchical structure.
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86 | This pattern comes from object-oriented languages where the
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87 | exception hierarchy is a natural extension of the object hierarchy.
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88 |
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89 | Consider the following exception hierarchy:
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90 | \begin{center}
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91 | \input{exception-hierarchy}
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92 | \end{center}
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93 | A handler labeled with any given exception can handle exceptions of that
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94 | type or any child type of that exception. The root of the exception hierarchy
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95 | (here \code{C}{exception}) acts as a catch-all, leaf types catch single types
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96 | and the exceptions in the middle can be used to catch different groups of
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97 | related exceptions.
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98 |
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99 | This system has some notable advantages, such as multiple levels of grouping,
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100 | the ability for libraries to add new exception types and the isolation
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101 | between different sub-hierarchies.
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102 | This design is used in \CFA even though it is not a object-orientated
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103 | language, so different tools are used to create the hierarchy.
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104 |
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105 | % Could I cite the rational for the Python IO exception rework?
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106 |
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107 | \subsection{Completion}
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108 | After the handler has finished, the entire exception operation has to complete
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109 | and continue executing somewhere else. This step is usually simple,
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110 | both logically and in its implementation, as the installation of the handler
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111 | is usually set up to do most of the work.
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112 |
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113 | The EHM can return control to many different places, where
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114 | the most common are after the handler definition (termination)
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115 | and after the raise (resumption).
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116 |
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117 | \subsection{Communication}
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118 | For effective exception handling, additional information is often passed
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119 | from the raise to the handler and back again.
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120 | So far, only communication of the exception's identity is covered.
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121 | A common communication method for adding information to an exception
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122 | is putting fields into the exception instance
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123 | and giving the handler access to them.
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124 | % You can either have pointers/references in the exception, or have p/rs to
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125 | % the exception when it doesn't have to be copied.
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126 | Passing references or pointers allows data at the raise location to be
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127 | updated, passing information in both directions.
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128 |
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129 | \section{Virtuals}
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130 | \label{s:virtuals}
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131 | A common feature in many programming languages is a tool to pair code
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132 | (behaviour) with data.
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133 | In \CFA, this is done with the virtual system,
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134 | which allow type information to be abstracted away, recovered and allow
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135 | operations to be performed on the abstract objects.
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136 |
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137 | Virtual types and casts are not part of \CFA's EHM nor are they required for
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138 | an EHM.
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139 | However, one of the best ways to support an exception hierarchy
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140 | is via a virtual hierarchy and dispatch system.
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141 | Ideally, the virtual system would have been part of \CFA before the work
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142 | on exception handling began, but unfortunately it was not.
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143 | Hence, only the features and framework needed for the EHM were
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144 | designed and implemented for this thesis.
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145 | Other features were considered to ensure that
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146 | the structure could accommodate other desirable features in the future
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147 | but are not implemented.
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148 | The rest of this section only discusses the implemented subset of the
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149 | virtual system design.
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150 |
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151 | The virtual system supports multiple ``trees" of types. Each tree is
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152 | a simple hierarchy with a single root type. Each type in a tree has exactly
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153 | one parent -- except for the root type which has zero parents -- and any
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154 | number of children.
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155 | Any type that belongs to any of these trees is called a virtual type.
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156 | % A type's ancestors are its parent and its parent's ancestors.
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157 | % The root type has no ancestors.
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158 | % A type's descendants are its children and its children's descendants.
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159 |
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160 | For the purposes of illustration, a proposed, but unimplemented, syntax
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161 | will be used. Each virtual type is represented by a trait with an annotation
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162 | that makes it a virtual type. This annotation is empty for a root type, which
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163 | creates a new tree:
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164 | \begin{cfa}
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165 | trait root_type(T) virtual() {}
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166 | \end{cfa}
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167 | The annotation may also refer to any existing virtual type to make this new
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168 | type a child of that type and part of the same tree. The parent may itself
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169 | be a child or a root type and may have any number of existing children.
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170 |
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171 | % OK, for some reason the b and t positioning options are reversed here.
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172 | \begin{minipage}[b]{0.6\textwidth}
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173 | \begin{cfa}
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174 | trait child_a(T) virtual(root_type) {}
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175 | trait grandchild(T) virtual(child_a) {}
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176 | trait child_b(T) virtual(root_type) {}
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177 | \end{cfa}
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178 | \end{minipage}
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179 | \begin{minipage}{0.4\textwidth}
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180 | \begin{center}
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181 | \input{virtual-tree}
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182 | \end{center}
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183 | \end{minipage}
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184 |
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185 | Every virtual type also has a list of virtual members and a unique id.
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186 | Both are stored in a virtual table.
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187 | Every instance of a virtual type also has a pointer to a virtual table stored
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188 | in it, although there is no per-type virtual table as in many other languages.
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189 |
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190 | The list of virtual members is accumulated from the root type down the tree.
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191 | Every virtual type
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192 | inherits the list of virtual members from its parent and may add more
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193 | virtual members to the end of the list which are passed on to its children.
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194 | Again, using the unimplemented syntax this might look like:
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195 | \begin{cfa}
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196 | trait root_type(T) virtual() {
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197 | const char * to_string(T const & this);
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198 | unsigned int size;
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199 | }
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200 |
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201 | trait child_type(T) virtual(root_type) {
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202 | char * irrelevant_function(int, char);
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203 | }
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204 | \end{cfa}
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205 | % Consider adding a diagram, but we might be good with the explanation.
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206 |
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207 | As @child_type@ is a child of @root_type@, it has the virtual members of
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208 | @root_type@ (@to_string@ and @size@) as well as the one it declared
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209 | (@irrelevant_function@).
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210 |
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211 | It is important to note that these are virtual members, and may contain
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212 | arbitrary fields, functions or otherwise.
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213 | The names ``size" and ``align" are reserved for the size and alignment of the
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214 | virtual type, and are always automatically initialized as such.
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215 | The other special case is uses of the trait's polymorphic argument
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216 | (@T@ in the example), which are always updated to refer to the current
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217 | virtual type. This allows functions that refer to the polymorphic argument
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218 | to act as traditional virtual methods (@to_string@ in the example), as the
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219 | object can always be passed to a virtual method in its virtual table.
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220 |
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221 | Up until this point, the virtual system is similar to ones found in
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222 | object-oriented languages, but this is where \CFA diverges.
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223 | Objects encapsulate a single set of methods in each type,
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224 | universally across the entire program,
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225 | and indeed all programs that use that type definition.
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226 | The only way to change any method is to inherit and define a new type with
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227 | its own universal implementation. In this sense,
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228 | these object-oriented types are ``closed" and cannot be altered.
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229 | % Because really they are class oriented.
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230 |
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231 | In \CFA, types do not encapsulate any code.
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232 | Whether or not a type satisfies any given assertion, and hence any trait, is
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233 | context sensitive. Types can begin to satisfy a trait, stop satisfying it or
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234 | satisfy the same trait at any lexical location in the program.
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235 | In this sense, a type's implementation in the set of functions and variables
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236 | that allow it to satisfy a trait is ``open" and can change
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237 | throughout the program.
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238 | This capability means it is impossible to pick a single set of functions
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239 | that represent a type's implementation across a program.
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240 |
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241 | \CFA side-steps this issue by not having a single virtual table for each
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242 | type. A user can define virtual tables that are filled in at their
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243 | declaration and given a name. Anywhere that name is visible, even if it is
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244 | defined locally inside a function (although in this case the user must ensure
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245 | it outlives any objects that use it), it can be used.
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246 | Specifically, a virtual type is ``bound" to a virtual table that
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247 | sets the virtual members for that object. The virtual members can be accessed
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248 | through the object.
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249 |
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250 | This means virtual tables are declared and named in \CFA.
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251 | They are declared as variables, using the type
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252 | @vtable(VIRTUAL_TYPE)@ and any valid name. For example:
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253 | \begin{cfa}
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254 | vtable(virtual_type_name) table_name;
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255 | \end{cfa}
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256 |
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257 | Like any variable, they may be forward declared with the @extern@ keyword.
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258 | Forward declaring virtual tables is relatively common.
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259 | Many virtual types have an ``obvious" implementation that works in most
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260 | cases.
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261 | A pattern that has appeared in the early work using virtuals is to
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262 | implement a virtual table with the the obvious definition and place a forward
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263 | declaration of it in the header beside the definition of the virtual type.
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264 |
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265 | Even on the full declaration, no initializer should be used.
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266 | Initialization is automatic.
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267 | The type id and special virtual members ``size" and ``align" only depend on
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268 | the virtual type, which is fixed given the type of the virtual table, and
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269 | so the compiler fills in a fixed value.
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270 | The other virtual members are resolved using the best match to the member's
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271 | name and type, in the same context as the virtual table is declared using
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272 | \CFA's normal resolution rules.
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273 |
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274 | While much of the virtual infrastructure has been created,
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275 | it is currently only used
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276 | internally for exception handling. The only user-level feature is the virtual
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277 | cast, which is the same as the \Cpp \code{C++}{dynamic_cast}.
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278 | \label{p:VirtualCast}
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279 | \begin{cfa}
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280 | (virtual TYPE)EXPRESSION
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281 | \end{cfa}
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282 | Note, the syntax and semantics matches a C-cast, rather than the function-like
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283 | \Cpp syntax for special casts. Both the type of @EXPRESSION@ and @TYPE@ must be
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284 | pointers to virtual types.
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285 | The cast dynamically checks if the @EXPRESSION@ type is the same or a sub-type
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286 | of @TYPE@, and if true, returns a pointer to the
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287 | @EXPRESSION@ object, otherwise it returns @0p@ (null pointer).
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288 | This allows the expression to be used as both a cast and a type check.
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289 |
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290 | \section{Exceptions}
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291 |
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292 | The syntax for declaring an exception is the same as declaring a structure
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293 | except the keyword:
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294 | \begin{cfa}
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295 | exception TYPE_NAME {
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296 | FIELDS
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297 | };
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298 | \end{cfa}
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299 |
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300 | Fields are filled in the same way as a structure as well. However, an extra
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301 | field is added that contains the pointer to the virtual table.
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302 | It must be explicitly initialized by the user when the exception is
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303 | constructed.
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304 |
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305 | Here is an example of declaring an exception type along with a virtual table,
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306 | assuming the exception has an ``obvious" implementation and a default
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307 | virtual table makes sense.
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308 |
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309 | \begin{minipage}[t]{0.4\textwidth}
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310 | Header (.hfa):
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311 | \begin{cfa}
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312 | exception Example {
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313 | int data;
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314 | };
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315 |
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316 | extern vtable(Example)
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317 | example_base_vtable;
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318 | \end{cfa}
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319 | \end{minipage}
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320 | \begin{minipage}[t]{0.6\textwidth}
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321 | Implementation (.cfa):
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322 | \begin{cfa}
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323 | vtable(Example) example_base_vtable
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324 | \end{cfa}
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325 | \vfil
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326 | \end{minipage}
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327 |
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328 | %\subsection{Exception Details}
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329 | This is the only interface needed when raising and handling exceptions.
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330 | However, it is actually a shorthand for a more complex
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331 | trait-based interface.
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332 |
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333 | The language views exceptions through a series of traits.
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334 | If a type satisfies them, then it can be used as an exception. The following
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335 | is the base trait all exceptions need to match.
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336 | \begin{cfa}
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337 | trait is_exception(exceptT &, virtualT &) {
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338 | // Numerous imaginary assertions.
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339 | };
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340 | \end{cfa}
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341 | The trait is defined over two types: the exception type and the virtual table
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342 | type. Each exception type should have a single virtual table type.
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343 | There are no actual assertions in this trait because the trait system
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344 | cannot express them yet (adding such assertions would be part of
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345 | completing the virtual system). The imaginary assertions would probably come
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346 | from a trait defined by the virtual system, and state that the exception type
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347 | is a virtual type,
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348 | that that the type is a descendant of @exception_t@ (the base exception type)
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349 | and allow the user to find the virtual table type.
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350 |
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351 | % I did have a note about how it is the programmer's responsibility to make
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352 | % sure the function is implemented correctly. But this is true of every
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353 | % similar system I know of (except Agda's I guess) so I took it out.
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354 |
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355 | There are two more traits for exceptions defined as follows:
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356 | \begin{cfa}
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357 | trait is_termination_exception(
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358 | exceptT &, virtualT & | is_exception(exceptT, virtualT)) {
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359 | void defaultTerminationHandler(exceptT &);
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360 | };
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361 |
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362 | trait is_resumption_exception(
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363 | exceptT &, virtualT & | is_exception(exceptT, virtualT)) {
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364 | void defaultResumptionHandler(exceptT &);
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365 | };
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366 | \end{cfa}
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367 | Both traits ensure a pair of types is an exception type and
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368 | its virtual table type,
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369 | and defines one of the two default handlers. The default handlers are used
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370 | as fallbacks and are discussed in detail in \autoref{s:ExceptionHandling}.
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371 |
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372 | However, all three of these traits can be tricky to use directly.
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373 | While there is a bit of repetition required,
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374 | the largest issue is that the virtual table type is mangled and not in a user
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375 | facing way. So, these three macros are provided to wrap these traits to
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376 | simplify referring to the names:
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377 | @IS_EXCEPTION@, @IS_TERMINATION_EXCEPTION@ and @IS_RESUMPTION_EXCEPTION@.
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378 |
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379 | All three take one or two arguments. The first argument is the name of the
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380 | exception type. The macro passes its unmangled and mangled form to the trait.
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381 | The second (optional) argument is a parenthesized list of polymorphic
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382 | arguments. This argument is only used with polymorphic exceptions and the
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383 | list is passed to both types.
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384 | In the current set-up, the two types always have the same polymorphic
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385 | arguments, so these macros can be used without losing flexibility.
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386 |
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387 | For example, consider a function that is polymorphic over types that have a
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388 | defined arithmetic exception:
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389 | \begin{cfa}
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390 | forall(Num | IS_EXCEPTION(Arithmetic, (Num)))
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391 | void some_math_function(Num & left, Num & right);
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392 | \end{cfa}
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393 |
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394 | \section{Exception Handling}
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395 | \label{s:ExceptionHandling}
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396 | As stated,
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397 | \CFA provides two kinds of exception handling: termination and resumption.
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398 | These twin operations are the core of \CFA's exception handling mechanism.
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399 | This section covers the general patterns shared by the two operations and
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400 | then goes on to cover the details of each individual operation.
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401 |
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402 | Both operations follow the same set of steps.
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403 | First, a user raises an exception.
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404 | Second, the exception propagates up the stack, searching for a handler.
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405 | Third, if a handler is found, the exception is caught and the handler is run.
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406 | After that control continues at a raise-dependent location.
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407 | As an alternate to the third step,
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408 | if a handler is not found, a default handler is run and, if it returns,
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409 | then control
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410 | continues after the raise.
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411 |
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412 | The differences between the two operations include how propagation is
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413 | performed, where execution continues after an exception is handled
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414 | and which default handler is run.
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415 |
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416 | \subsection{Termination}
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417 | \label{s:Termination}
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418 | Termination handling is the familiar kind of handling
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419 | used in most programming
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420 | languages with exception handling.
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421 | It is a dynamic, non-local goto. If the raised exception is matched and
|
---|
422 | handled, the stack is unwound and control (usually) continues in the function
|
---|
423 | on the call stack that defined the handler.
|
---|
424 | Termination is commonly used when an error has occurred and recovery is
|
---|
425 | impossible locally.
|
---|
426 |
|
---|
427 | % (usually) Control can continue in the current function but then a different
|
---|
428 | % control flow construct should be used.
|
---|
429 |
|
---|
430 | A termination raise is started with the @throw@ statement:
|
---|
431 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
432 | throw EXPRESSION;
|
---|
433 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
434 | The expression must return a reference to a termination exception, where the
|
---|
435 | termination exception is any type that satisfies the trait
|
---|
436 | @is_termination_exception@ at the call site.
|
---|
437 | Through \CFA's trait system, the trait functions are implicitly passed into the
|
---|
438 | throw code for use by the EHM.
|
---|
439 | A new @defaultTerminationHandler@ can be defined in any scope to
|
---|
440 | change the throw's behaviour when a handler is not found (see below).
|
---|
441 |
|
---|
442 | The throw copies the provided exception into managed memory to ensure
|
---|
443 | the exception is not destroyed if the stack is unwound.
|
---|
444 | It is the user's responsibility to ensure the original exception is cleaned
|
---|
445 | up whether the stack is unwound or not. Allocating it on the stack is
|
---|
446 | usually sufficient.
|
---|
447 |
|
---|
448 | % How to say propagation starts, its first sub-step is the search.
|
---|
449 | Then propagation starts with the search. \CFA uses a ``first match" rule so
|
---|
450 | matching is performed with the copied exception as the search key.
|
---|
451 | It starts from the raise site and proceeds towards base of the stack,
|
---|
452 | from callee to caller.
|
---|
453 | At each stack frame, a check is made for termination handlers defined by the
|
---|
454 | @catch@ clauses of a @try@ statement.
|
---|
455 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
456 | try {
|
---|
457 | GUARDED_BLOCK
|
---|
458 | } catch (EXCEPTION_TYPE$\(_1\)$ * [NAME$\(_1\)$]) {
|
---|
459 | HANDLER_BLOCK$\(_1\)$
|
---|
460 | } catch (EXCEPTION_TYPE$\(_2\)$ * [NAME$\(_2\)$]) {
|
---|
461 | HANDLER_BLOCK$\(_2\)$
|
---|
462 | }
|
---|
463 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
464 | When viewed on its own, a try statement simply executes the statements
|
---|
465 | in the \snake{GUARDED_BLOCK} and when those are finished,
|
---|
466 | the try statement finishes.
|
---|
467 |
|
---|
468 | However, while the guarded statements are being executed, including any
|
---|
469 | invoked functions, all the handlers in these statements are included in the
|
---|
470 | search path.
|
---|
471 | Hence, if a termination exception is raised, these handlers may be matched
|
---|
472 | against the exception and may handle it.
|
---|
473 |
|
---|
474 | Exception matching checks the handler in each catch clause in the order
|
---|
475 | they appear, top to bottom. If the representation of the raised exception type
|
---|
476 | is the same or a descendant of @EXCEPTION_TYPE@$_i$, then @NAME@$_i$
|
---|
477 | (if provided) is
|
---|
478 | bound to a pointer to the exception and the statements in @HANDLER_BLOCK@$_i$
|
---|
479 | are executed. If control reaches the end of the handler, the exception is
|
---|
480 | freed and control continues after the try statement.
|
---|
481 |
|
---|
482 | If no termination handler is found during the search, then the default handler
|
---|
483 | (\defaultTerminationHandler) visible at the raise statement is called.
|
---|
484 | Through \CFA's trait system the best match at the raise statement is used.
|
---|
485 | This function is run and is passed the copied exception.
|
---|
486 | If the default handler finishes, control continues after the raise statement.
|
---|
487 |
|
---|
488 | There is a global @defaultTerminationHandler@ that is polymorphic over all
|
---|
489 | termination exception types.
|
---|
490 | The global default termination handler performs a cancellation
|
---|
491 | (as described in \vref{s:Cancellation})
|
---|
492 | on the current stack with the copied exception.
|
---|
493 | Since it is so general, a more specific handler can be defined,
|
---|
494 | overriding the default behaviour for the specific exception types.
|
---|
495 |
|
---|
496 | For example, consider an error reading a configuration file.
|
---|
497 | This is most likely a problem with the configuration file (@config_error@),
|
---|
498 | but the function could have been passed the wrong file name (@arg_error@).
|
---|
499 | In this case the function could raise one exception and then, if it is
|
---|
500 | unhandled, raise the other.
|
---|
501 | This is not usual behaviour for either exception so changing the
|
---|
502 | default handler will be done locally:
|
---|
503 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
504 | {
|
---|
505 | void defaultTerminationHandler(config_error &) {
|
---|
506 | throw (arg_error){arg_vt};
|
---|
507 | }
|
---|
508 | throw (config_error){config_vt};
|
---|
509 | }
|
---|
510 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
511 |
|
---|
512 | \subsection{Resumption}
|
---|
513 | \label{s:Resumption}
|
---|
514 |
|
---|
515 | Resumption exception handling is less familar form of exception handling,
|
---|
516 | but is
|
---|
517 | just as old~\cite{Goodenough75} and is simpler in many ways.
|
---|
518 | It is a dynamic, non-local function call. If the raised exception is
|
---|
519 | matched, a closure is taken from up the stack and executed,
|
---|
520 | after which the raising function continues executing.
|
---|
521 | The common uses for resumption exceptions include
|
---|
522 | potentially repairable errors, where execution can continue in the same
|
---|
523 | function once the error is corrected, and
|
---|
524 | ignorable events, such as logging where nothing needs to happen and control
|
---|
525 | should always continue from the raise site.
|
---|
526 |
|
---|
527 | Except for the changes to fit into that pattern, resumption exception
|
---|
528 | handling is symmetric with termination exception handling, by design
|
---|
529 | (see \autoref{s:Termination}).
|
---|
530 |
|
---|
531 | A resumption raise is started with the @throwResume@ statement:
|
---|
532 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
533 | throwResume EXPRESSION;
|
---|
534 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
535 | % The new keywords are currently ``experimental" and not used in this work.
|
---|
536 | It works much the same way as the termination raise, except the
|
---|
537 | type must satisfy the \snake{is_resumption_exception} that uses the
|
---|
538 | default handler: \defaultResumptionHandler.
|
---|
539 | This can be specialized for particular exception types.
|
---|
540 |
|
---|
541 | At run-time, no exception copy is made. Since
|
---|
542 | resumption does not unwind the stack nor otherwise remove values from the
|
---|
543 | current scope, there is no need to manage memory to keep the exception
|
---|
544 | allocated.
|
---|
545 |
|
---|
546 | Then propagation starts with the search,
|
---|
547 | following the same search path as termination,
|
---|
548 | from the raise site to the base of stack and top of try statement to bottom.
|
---|
549 | However, the handlers on try statements are defined by @catchResume@ clauses.
|
---|
550 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
551 | try {
|
---|
552 | GUARDED_BLOCK
|
---|
553 | } catchResume (EXCEPTION_TYPE$\(_1\)$ * [NAME$\(_1\)$]) {
|
---|
554 | HANDLER_BLOCK$\(_1\)$
|
---|
555 | } catchResume (EXCEPTION_TYPE$\(_2\)$ * [NAME$\(_2\)$]) {
|
---|
556 | HANDLER_BLOCK$\(_2\)$
|
---|
557 | }
|
---|
558 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
559 | Note that termination handlers and resumption handlers may be used together
|
---|
560 | in a single try statement, intermixing @catch@ and @catchResume@ freely.
|
---|
561 | Each type of handler only interacts with exceptions from the matching
|
---|
562 | kind of raise.
|
---|
563 | Like @catch@ clauses, @catchResume@ clauses have no effect if an exception
|
---|
564 | is not raised.
|
---|
565 |
|
---|
566 | The matching rules are exactly the same as well.
|
---|
567 | The first major difference here is that after
|
---|
568 | @EXCEPTION_TYPE@$_i$ is matched and @NAME@$_i$ is bound to the exception,
|
---|
569 | @HANDLER_BLOCK@$_i$ is executed right away without first unwinding the stack.
|
---|
570 | After the block has finished running, control jumps to the raise site, where
|
---|
571 | the just handled exception came from, and continues executing after it,
|
---|
572 | not after the try statement.
|
---|
573 |
|
---|
574 | For instance, a resumption used to send messages to the logger may not
|
---|
575 | need to be handled at all. Putting the following default handler
|
---|
576 | at the global scope can make handling that exception optional by default.
|
---|
577 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
578 | void defaultResumptionHandler(log_message &) {
|
---|
579 | // Nothing, it is fine not to handle logging.
|
---|
580 | }
|
---|
581 | // ... No change at raise sites. ...
|
---|
582 | throwResume (log_message){strlit_log, "Begin event processing."}
|
---|
583 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
584 |
|
---|
585 | \subsubsection{Resumption Marking}
|
---|
586 | \label{s:ResumptionMarking}
|
---|
587 | A key difference between resumption and termination is that resumption does
|
---|
588 | not unwind the stack. A side effect is that, when a handler is matched
|
---|
589 | and run, its try block (the guarded statements) and every try statement
|
---|
590 | searched before it are still on the stack. Their presence can lead to
|
---|
591 | the recursive resumption problem.\cite{Buhr00a}
|
---|
592 | % Other possible citation is MacLaren77, but the form is different.
|
---|
593 |
|
---|
594 | The recursive resumption problem is any situation where a resumption handler
|
---|
595 | ends up being called while it is running.
|
---|
596 | Consider a trivial case:
|
---|
597 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
598 | try {
|
---|
599 | throwResume (E &){};
|
---|
600 | } catchResume(E *) {
|
---|
601 | throwResume (E &){};
|
---|
602 | }
|
---|
603 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
604 | When this code is executed, the guarded @throwResume@ starts a
|
---|
605 | search and matches the handler in the @catchResume@ clause. This
|
---|
606 | call is placed on the stack above the try-block.
|
---|
607 | Now the second raise in the handler searches the same try block,
|
---|
608 | matches again and then puts another instance of the
|
---|
609 | same handler on the stack leading to infinite recursion.
|
---|
610 |
|
---|
611 | While this situation is trivial and easy to avoid, much more complex cycles
|
---|
612 | can form with multiple handlers and different exception types.
|
---|
613 | To prevent all of these cases, each try statement is ``marked" from the
|
---|
614 | time the exception search reaches it to either when a handler completes
|
---|
615 | handling that exception or when the search reaches the base
|
---|
616 | of the stack.
|
---|
617 | While a try statement is marked, its handlers are never matched, effectively
|
---|
618 | skipping over it to the next try statement.
|
---|
619 |
|
---|
620 | \begin{center}
|
---|
621 | \input{stack-marking}
|
---|
622 | \end{center}
|
---|
623 |
|
---|
624 | There are other sets of marking rules that could be used.
|
---|
625 | For instance, marking just the handlers that caught the exception
|
---|
626 | would also prevent recursive resumption.
|
---|
627 | However, the rules selected mirror what happens with termination,
|
---|
628 | so this reduces the amount of rules and patterns a programmer has to know.
|
---|
629 |
|
---|
630 | The marked try statements are the ones that would be removed from
|
---|
631 | the stack for a termination exception, \ie those on the stack
|
---|
632 | between the handler and the raise statement.
|
---|
633 | This symmetry applies to the default handler as well, as both kinds of
|
---|
634 | default handlers are run at the raise statement, rather than (physically
|
---|
635 | or logically) at the bottom of the stack.
|
---|
636 | % In early development having the default handler happen after
|
---|
637 | % unmarking was just more useful. We assume that will continue.
|
---|
638 |
|
---|
639 | \section{Conditional Catch}
|
---|
640 | Both termination and resumption handler clauses can be given an additional
|
---|
641 | condition to further control which exceptions they handle:
|
---|
642 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
643 | catch (EXCEPTION_TYPE * [NAME] ; CONDITION)
|
---|
644 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
645 | First, the same semantics is used to match the exception type. Second, if the
|
---|
646 | exception matches, @CONDITION@ is executed. The condition expression may
|
---|
647 | reference all names in scope at the beginning of the try block and @NAME@
|
---|
648 | introduced in the handler clause. If the condition is true, then the handler
|
---|
649 | matches. Otherwise, the exception search continues as if the exception type
|
---|
650 | did not match.
|
---|
651 |
|
---|
652 | The condition matching allows finer matching by checking
|
---|
653 | more kinds of information than just the exception type.
|
---|
654 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
655 | try {
|
---|
656 | handle1 = open( f1, ... );
|
---|
657 | handle2 = open( f2, ... );
|
---|
658 | handle3 = open( f3, ... );
|
---|
659 | ...
|
---|
660 | } catch( IOFailure * f ; fd( f ) == f1 ) {
|
---|
661 | // Only handle IO failure for f1.
|
---|
662 | } catch( IOFailure * f ; fd( f ) == f3 ) {
|
---|
663 | // Only handle IO failure for f3.
|
---|
664 | }
|
---|
665 | // Handle a failure relating to f2 further down the stack.
|
---|
666 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
667 | In this example, the file that experienced the IO error is used to decide
|
---|
668 | which handler should be run, if any at all.
|
---|
669 |
|
---|
670 | \begin{comment}
|
---|
671 | % I know I actually haven't got rid of them yet, but I'm going to try
|
---|
672 | % to write it as if I had and see if that makes sense:
|
---|
673 | \section{Reraising}
|
---|
674 | \label{s:Reraising}
|
---|
675 | Within the handler block or functions called from the handler block, it is
|
---|
676 | possible to reraise the most recently caught exception with @throw@ or
|
---|
677 | @throwResume@, respectively.
|
---|
678 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
679 | try {
|
---|
680 | ...
|
---|
681 | } catch( ... ) {
|
---|
682 | ... throw;
|
---|
683 | } catchResume( ... ) {
|
---|
684 | ... throwResume;
|
---|
685 | }
|
---|
686 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
687 | The only difference between a raise and a reraise is that reraise does not
|
---|
688 | create a new exception; instead it continues using the current exception, \ie
|
---|
689 | no allocation and copy. However the default handler is still set to the one
|
---|
690 | visible at the raise point, and hence, for termination could refer to data that
|
---|
691 | is part of an unwound stack frame. To prevent this problem, a new default
|
---|
692 | handler is generated that does a program-level abort.
|
---|
693 | \end{comment}
|
---|
694 |
|
---|
695 | \subsection{Comparison with Reraising}
|
---|
696 | In languages without conditional catch -- that is, no ability to match an
|
---|
697 | exception based on something other than its type -- it can be mimicked
|
---|
698 | by matching all exceptions of the right type, checking any additional
|
---|
699 | conditions inside the handler and re-raising the exception if it does not
|
---|
700 | match those.
|
---|
701 |
|
---|
702 | Here is a minimal example comparing both patterns, using @throw;@
|
---|
703 | (no operand) to start a re-raise.
|
---|
704 | \begin{center}
|
---|
705 | \begin{tabular}{l r}
|
---|
706 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
707 | try {
|
---|
708 | do_work_may_throw();
|
---|
709 | } catch(exception_t * exc ;
|
---|
710 | can_handle(exc)) {
|
---|
711 | handle(exc);
|
---|
712 | }
|
---|
713 |
|
---|
714 |
|
---|
715 |
|
---|
716 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
717 | &
|
---|
718 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
719 | try {
|
---|
720 | do_work_may_throw();
|
---|
721 | } catch(exception_t * exc) {
|
---|
722 | if (can_handle(exc)) {
|
---|
723 | handle(exc);
|
---|
724 | } else {
|
---|
725 | throw;
|
---|
726 | }
|
---|
727 | }
|
---|
728 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
729 | \end{tabular}
|
---|
730 | \end{center}
|
---|
731 | At first glance, catch-and-reraise may appear to just be a quality-of-life
|
---|
732 | feature, but there are some significant differences between the two
|
---|
733 | strategies.
|
---|
734 |
|
---|
735 | A simple difference that is more important for \CFA than many other languages
|
---|
736 | is that the raise site changes with a re-raise, but does not with a
|
---|
737 | conditional catch.
|
---|
738 | This is important in \CFA because control returns to the raise site to run
|
---|
739 | the per-site default handler. Because of this, only a conditional catch can
|
---|
740 | allow the original raise to continue.
|
---|
741 |
|
---|
742 | The more complex issue comes from the difference in how conditional
|
---|
743 | catches and re-raises handle multiple handlers attached to a single try
|
---|
744 | statement. A conditional catch will continue checking later handlers while
|
---|
745 | a re-raise will skip them.
|
---|
746 | If the different handlers could handle some of the same exceptions,
|
---|
747 | translating a try statement that uses one to use the other can quickly
|
---|
748 | become non-trivial:
|
---|
749 |
|
---|
750 | \noindent
|
---|
751 | Original, with conditional catch:
|
---|
752 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
753 | ...
|
---|
754 | } catch (an_exception * e ; check_a(e)) {
|
---|
755 | handle_a(e);
|
---|
756 | } catch (exception_t * e ; check_b(e)) {
|
---|
757 | handle_b(e);
|
---|
758 | }
|
---|
759 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
760 | Translated, with re-raise:
|
---|
761 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
762 | ...
|
---|
763 | } catch (exception_t * e) {
|
---|
764 | an_exception * an_e = (virtual an_exception *)e;
|
---|
765 | if (an_e && check_a(an_e)) {
|
---|
766 | handle_a(an_e);
|
---|
767 | } else if (check_b(e)) {
|
---|
768 | handle_b(e);
|
---|
769 | } else {
|
---|
770 | throw;
|
---|
771 | }
|
---|
772 | }
|
---|
773 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
774 | (There is a simpler solution if @handle_a@ never raises exceptions,
|
---|
775 | using nested try statements.)
|
---|
776 |
|
---|
777 | % } catch (an_exception * e ; check_a(e)) {
|
---|
778 | % handle_a(e);
|
---|
779 | % } catch (exception_t * e ; !(virtual an_exception *)e && check_b(e)) {
|
---|
780 | % handle_b(e);
|
---|
781 | % }
|
---|
782 | %
|
---|
783 | % } catch (an_exception * e)
|
---|
784 | % if (check_a(e)) {
|
---|
785 | % handle_a(e);
|
---|
786 | % } else throw;
|
---|
787 | % } catch (exception_t * e)
|
---|
788 | % if (check_b(e)) {
|
---|
789 | % handle_b(e);
|
---|
790 | % } else throw;
|
---|
791 | % }
|
---|
792 | In similar simple examples, translating from re-raise to conditional catch
|
---|
793 | takes less code but it does not have a general, trivial solution either.
|
---|
794 |
|
---|
795 | So, given that the two patterns do not trivially translate into each other,
|
---|
796 | it becomes a matter of which on should be encouraged and made the default.
|
---|
797 | From the premise that if a handler could handle an exception then it
|
---|
798 | should, it follows that checking as many handlers as possible is preferred.
|
---|
799 | So, conditional catch and checking later handlers is a good default.
|
---|
800 |
|
---|
801 | \section{Finally Clauses}
|
---|
802 | \label{s:FinallyClauses}
|
---|
803 | Finally clauses are used to perform unconditional cleanup when leaving a
|
---|
804 | scope and are placed at the end of a try statement after any handler clauses:
|
---|
805 | \begin{cfa}
|
---|
806 | try {
|
---|
807 | GUARDED_BLOCK
|
---|
808 | } ... // any number or kind of handler clauses
|
---|
809 | ... finally {
|
---|
810 | FINALLY_BLOCK
|
---|
811 | }
|
---|
812 | \end{cfa}
|
---|
813 | The @FINALLY_BLOCK@ is executed when the try statement is removed from the
|
---|
814 | stack, including when the @GUARDED_BLOCK@ finishes, any termination handler
|
---|
815 | finishes or during an unwind.
|
---|
816 | The only time the block is not executed is if the program is exited before
|
---|
817 | the stack is unwound.
|
---|
818 |
|
---|
819 | Execution of the finally block should always finish, meaning control runs off
|
---|
820 | the end of the block. This requirement ensures control always continues as if
|
---|
821 | the finally clause is not present, \ie finally is for cleanup, not changing
|
---|
822 | control flow.
|
---|
823 | Because of this requirement, local control flow out of the finally block
|
---|
824 | is forbidden. The compiler precludes any @break@, @continue@, @fallthru@ or
|
---|
825 | @return@ that causes control to leave the finally block. Other ways to leave
|
---|
826 | the finally block, such as a @longjmp@ or termination are much harder to check,
|
---|
827 | and at best require additional run-time overhead, and so are only
|
---|
828 | discouraged.
|
---|
829 |
|
---|
830 | Not all languages with unwinding have finally clauses. Notably, \Cpp does
|
---|
831 | without it as destructors, and the RAII design pattern, serve a similar role.
|
---|
832 | Although destructors and finally clauses can be used for the same cases,
|
---|
833 | they have their own strengths, similar to top-level function and lambda
|
---|
834 | functions with closures.
|
---|
835 | Destructors take more work to create, but if there is clean-up code
|
---|
836 | that needs to be run every time a type is used, they are much easier
|
---|
837 | to set up for each use. % It's automatic.
|
---|
838 | On the other hand, finally clauses capture the local context, so are easy to
|
---|
839 | use when the cleanup is not dependent on the type of a variable or requires
|
---|
840 | information from multiple variables.
|
---|
841 |
|
---|
842 | \section{Cancellation}
|
---|
843 | \label{s:Cancellation}
|
---|
844 | Cancellation is a stack-level abort, which can be thought of as as an
|
---|
845 | uncatchable termination. It unwinds the entire current stack, and if
|
---|
846 | possible, forwards the cancellation exception to a different stack.
|
---|
847 |
|
---|
848 | Cancellation is not an exception operation like termination or resumption.
|
---|
849 | There is no special statement for starting a cancellation; instead the standard
|
---|
850 | library function @cancel_stack@ is called, passing an exception. Unlike a
|
---|
851 | raise, this exception is not used in matching, only to pass information about
|
---|
852 | the cause of the cancellation.
|
---|
853 | Finally, as no handler is provided, there is no default handler.
|
---|
854 |
|
---|
855 | After @cancel_stack@ is called, the exception is copied into the EHM's memory
|
---|
856 | and the current stack is unwound.
|
---|
857 | The behaviour after that depends on the kind of stack being cancelled.
|
---|
858 |
|
---|
859 | \paragraph{Main Stack}
|
---|
860 | The main stack is the one used by
|
---|
861 | the program's main function at the start of execution,
|
---|
862 | and is the only stack in a sequential program.
|
---|
863 | After the main stack is unwound, there is a program-level abort.
|
---|
864 |
|
---|
865 | The first reason for this behaviour is for sequential programs where there
|
---|
866 | is only one stack, and hence no stack to pass information to.
|
---|
867 | Second, even in concurrent programs, the main stack has no dependency
|
---|
868 | on another stack and no reliable way to find another living stack.
|
---|
869 | Finally, keeping the same behaviour in both sequential and concurrent
|
---|
870 | programs is simple and easy to understand.
|
---|
871 |
|
---|
872 | \paragraph{Thread Stack}
|
---|
873 | A thread stack is created for a \CFA @thread@ object or object that satisfies
|
---|
874 | the @is_thread@ trait.
|
---|
875 | After a thread stack is unwound, the exception is stored until another
|
---|
876 | thread attempts to join with it. Then the exception @ThreadCancelled@,
|
---|
877 | which stores a reference to the thread and to the exception passed to the
|
---|
878 | cancellation, is reported from the join to the joining thread.
|
---|
879 | There is one difference between an explicit join (with the @join@ function)
|
---|
880 | and an implicit join (from a destructor call). The explicit join takes the
|
---|
881 | default handler (@defaultResumptionHandler@) from its calling context while
|
---|
882 | the implicit join provides its own, which does a program abort if the
|
---|
883 | @ThreadCancelled@ exception cannot be handled.
|
---|
884 |
|
---|
885 | The communication and synchronization are done here because threads only have
|
---|
886 | two structural points (not dependent on user-code) where
|
---|
887 | communication/synchronization happens: start and join.
|
---|
888 | Since a thread must be running to perform a cancellation (and cannot be
|
---|
889 | cancelled from another stack), the cancellation must be after start and
|
---|
890 | before the join, so join is used.
|
---|
891 |
|
---|
892 | % TODO: Find somewhere to discuss unwind collisions.
|
---|
893 | The difference between the explicit and implicit join is for safety and
|
---|
894 | debugging. It helps prevent unwinding collisions by avoiding throwing from
|
---|
895 | a destructor and prevents cascading the error across multiple threads if
|
---|
896 | the user is not equipped to deal with it.
|
---|
897 | It is always possible to add an explicit join if that is the desired behaviour.
|
---|
898 |
|
---|
899 | With explicit join and a default handler that triggers a cancellation, it is
|
---|
900 | possible to cascade an error across any number of threads,
|
---|
901 | alternating between the resumption (possibly termination) and cancellation,
|
---|
902 | cleaning up each
|
---|
903 | in turn, until the error is handled or the main thread is reached.
|
---|
904 |
|
---|
905 | \paragraph{Coroutine Stack}
|
---|
906 | A coroutine stack is created for a @coroutine@ object or object that
|
---|
907 | satisfies the @is_coroutine@ trait.
|
---|
908 | After a coroutine stack is unwound, control returns to the @resume@ function
|
---|
909 | that most recently resumed it. @resume@ reports a
|
---|
910 | @CoroutineCancelled@ exception, which contains a reference to the cancelled
|
---|
911 | coroutine and the exception used to cancel it.
|
---|
912 | The @resume@ function also takes the \defaultResumptionHandler{} from the
|
---|
913 | caller's context and passes it to the internal report.
|
---|
914 |
|
---|
915 | A coroutine only knows of two other coroutines,
|
---|
916 | its starter and its last resumer.
|
---|
917 | The starter has a much more distant connection, while the last resumer just
|
---|
918 | (in terms of coroutine state) called resume on this coroutine, so the message
|
---|
919 | is passed to the latter.
|
---|
920 |
|
---|
921 | With a default handler that triggers a cancellation, it is possible to
|
---|
922 | cascade an error across any number of coroutines,
|
---|
923 | alternating between the resumption (possibly termination) and cancellation,
|
---|
924 | cleaning up each in turn,
|
---|
925 | until the error is handled or a thread stack is reached.
|
---|