[e8a7ca2] | 1 | \chapter{Introduction} |
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| 2 | |
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[471ff17] | 3 | % The highest level overview of Cforall and EHMs. Get this done right away. |
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[21f2e92] | 4 | This thesis goes over the design and implementation of the exception handling |
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| 5 | mechanism (EHM) of |
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[6071efc] | 6 | \CFA (pronounced sea-for-all and may be written Cforall or CFA). |
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| 7 | \CFA is a new programming language that extends C, that maintains |
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| 8 | backwards-compatibility while introducing modern programming features. |
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| 9 | Adding exception handling to \CFA gives it new ways to handle errors and |
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| 10 | make other large control-flow jumps. |
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[471ff17] | 11 | |
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| 12 | % Now take a step back and explain what exceptions are generally. |
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[21f2e92] | 13 | Exception handling provides dynamic inter-function control flow. |
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[553f8abe] | 14 | There are two forms of exception handling covered in this thesis: |
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| 15 | termination, which acts as a multi-level return, |
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| 16 | and resumption, which is a dynamic function call. |
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[471ff17] | 17 | Termination handling is much more common, |
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| 18 | to the extent that it is often seen |
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[21f2e92] | 19 | This seperation is uncommon because termination exception handling is so |
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| 20 | much more common that it is often assumed. |
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[471ff17] | 21 | % WHY: Mention other forms of continuation and \cite{CommonLisp} here? |
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| 22 | A language's EHM is the combination of language syntax and run-time |
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| 23 | components that are used to construct, raise and handle exceptions, |
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| 24 | including all control flow. |
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[553f8abe] | 25 | |
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| 26 | Termination exception handling allows control to return to any previous |
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| 27 | function on the stack directly, skipping any functions between it and the |
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| 28 | current function. |
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[e46ea00] | 29 | \begin{center} |
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| 30 | \input{callreturn} |
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| 31 | \end{center} |
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| 32 | |
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[6071efc] | 33 | Resumption exception handling seaches the stack for a handler and then calls |
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| 34 | it without adding or removing any other stack frames. |
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[553f8abe] | 35 | \todo{Add a diagram showing control flow for resumption.} |
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[e46ea00] | 36 | |
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[553f8abe] | 37 | Although a powerful feature, exception handling tends to be complex to set up |
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| 38 | and expensive to use |
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| 39 | so they are often limited to unusual or ``exceptional" cases. |
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| 40 | The classic example of this is error handling, exceptions can be used to |
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| 41 | remove error handling logic from the main execution path and while paying |
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| 42 | most of the cost only when the error actually occurs. |
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[e8a7ca2] | 43 | |
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[471ff17] | 44 | \section{Thesis Overview} |
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[21f2e92] | 45 | This work describes the design and implementation of the \CFA EHM. |
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[553f8abe] | 46 | The \CFA EHM implements all of the common exception features (or an |
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[e8a7ca2] | 47 | equivalent) found in most other EHMs and adds some features of its own. |
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| 48 | The design of all the features had to be adapted to \CFA's feature set as |
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| 49 | some of the underlying tools used to implement and express exception handling |
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| 50 | in other languages are absent in \CFA. |
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| 51 | Still the resulting syntax resembles that of other languages: |
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| 52 | \begin{cfa} |
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| 53 | try { |
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| 54 | ... |
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| 55 | T * object = malloc(request_size); |
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| 56 | if (!object) { |
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| 57 | throw OutOfMemory{fixed_allocation, request_size}; |
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| 58 | } |
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| 59 | ... |
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| 60 | } catch (OutOfMemory * error) { |
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| 61 | ... |
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| 62 | } |
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| 63 | \end{cfa} |
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| 64 | |
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| 65 | % A note that yes, that was a very fast overview. |
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[471ff17] | 66 | The design and implementation of all of \CFA's EHM's features are |
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[553f8abe] | 67 | described in detail throughout this thesis, whether they are a common feature |
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[e8a7ca2] | 68 | or one unique to \CFA. |
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| 69 | |
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| 70 | % The current state of the project and what it contributes. |
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[471ff17] | 71 | All of these features have been implemented in \CFA, along with |
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[553f8abe] | 72 | a suite of test cases as part of this project. |
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[e8a7ca2] | 73 | The implementation techniques are generally applicable in other programming |
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[553f8abe] | 74 | languages and much of the design is as well. |
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| 75 | Some parts of the EHM use other features unique to \CFA and these would be |
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| 76 | harder to replicate in other programming languages. |
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[e46ea00] | 77 | |
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[553f8abe] | 78 | % Talk about other programming languages. |
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| 79 | Some existing programming languages that include EHMs/exception handling |
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| 80 | include C++, Java and Python. All three examples focus on termination |
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| 81 | exceptions which unwind the stack as part of the |
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| 82 | Exceptions also can replace return codes and return unions. |
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[e46ea00] | 83 | |
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| 84 | The contributions of this work are: |
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| 85 | \begin{enumerate} |
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[553f8abe] | 86 | \item Designing \CFA's exception handling mechanism, adapting designs from |
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| 87 | other programming languages and the creation of new features. |
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| 88 | \item Implementing stack unwinding and the EHM in \CFA, including updating |
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| 89 | the compiler and the run-time environment. |
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| 90 | \item Designed and implemented a prototype virtual system. |
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| 91 | % I think the virtual system and per-call site default handlers are the only |
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| 92 | % "new" features, everything else is a matter of implementation. |
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[e46ea00] | 93 | \end{enumerate} |
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| 94 | |
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[471ff17] | 95 | \todo{I can't figure out a good lead-in to the roadmap.} |
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| 96 | The next section covers the existing state of exceptions. |
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| 97 | The existing state of \CFA is also covered in \autoref{c:existing}. |
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| 98 | The new features are introduced in \autoref{c:features}, |
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| 99 | which explains their usage and design. |
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[553f8abe] | 100 | That is followed by the implementation of those features in |
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| 101 | \autoref{c:implement}. |
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[471ff17] | 102 | The performance results are examined in \autoref{c:performance}. |
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| 103 | Possibilities to extend this project are discussed in \autoref{c:future}. |
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| 104 | |
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| 105 | \section{Background} |
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| 106 | \label{s:background} |
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| 107 | |
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| 108 | Exception handling is not a new concept, |
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| 109 | with papers on the subject dating back 70s. |
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| 110 | |
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| 111 | Their were popularised by \Cpp, |
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| 112 | which added them in its first major wave of non-object-orientated features |
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| 113 | in 1990. |
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| 114 | % https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/history |
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| 115 | |
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| 116 | Java was the next popular language to use exceptions. It is also the most |
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| 117 | popular language with checked exceptions. |
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| 118 | Checked exceptions are part of the function interface they are raised from. |
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| 119 | This includes functions they propogate through, until a handler for that |
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| 120 | type of exception is found. |
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| 121 | This makes exception information explicit, which can improve clarity and |
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| 122 | safety, but can slow down programming. |
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| 123 | Some of these, such as dealing with high-order methods or an overly specified |
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| 124 | throws clause, are technical. However some of the issues are much more |
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| 125 | human, in that writing/updating all the exception signatures can be enough |
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| 126 | of a burden people will hack the system to avoid them. |
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| 127 | Including the ``catch-and-ignore" pattern where a catch block is used without |
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| 128 | anything to repair or recover from the exception. |
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| 129 | |
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| 130 | %\subsection |
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| 131 | Resumption exceptions have been much less popular. |
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| 132 | Although resumption has a history as old as termination's, very few |
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| 133 | programming languages have implement them. |
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| 134 | % http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdf/xerox/parc/techReports/ |
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| 135 | % CSL-79-3_Mesa_Language_Manual_Version_5.0.pdf |
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| 136 | Mesa is one programming languages that did and experiance with that |
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| 137 | languages is quoted as being one of the reasons resumptions were not |
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| 138 | included in the \Cpp standard. |
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| 139 | % https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exception_handling |
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| 140 | \todo{A comment about why we did include them when they are so unpopular |
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| 141 | might be approprate.} |
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| 142 | |
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| 143 | %\subsection |
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| 144 | Functional languages, tend to use solutions like the return union, but some |
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| 145 | exception-like constructs still appear. |
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| 146 | |
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| 147 | For instance Haskell's built in error mechanism can make the result of any |
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| 148 | expression, including function calls. Any expression that examines an |
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| 149 | error value will in-turn produce an error. This continues until the main |
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| 150 | function produces an error or until it is handled by one of the catch |
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| 151 | functions. |
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| 152 | |
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| 153 | %\subsection |
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| 154 | More recently exceptions seem to be vanishing from newer programming |
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| 155 | languages. |
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| 156 | Rust and Go reduce this feature to panics. |
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| 157 | Panicing is somewhere between a termination exception and a program abort. |
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| 158 | Notably in Rust a panic can trigger either, a panic may unwind the stack or |
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| 159 | simply kill the process. |
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| 160 | % https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/panic/fn.catch_unwind.html |
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| 161 | Go's panic is much more similar to a termination exception but there is |
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| 162 | only a catch-all function with \code{Go}{recover()}. |
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| 163 | So exceptions still are appearing, just in reduced forms. |
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| 164 | |
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| 165 | %\subsection |
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| 166 | Exception handling's most common use cases are in error handling. |
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| 167 | Here are some other ways to handle errors and comparisons with exceptions. |
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| 168 | \begin{itemize} |
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| 169 | \item\emph{Error Codes}: |
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| 170 | This pattern uses an enumeration (or just a set of fixed values) to indicate |
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| 171 | that an error has occured and which error it was. |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | There are some issues if a function wants to return an error code and another |
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| 174 | value. The main issue is that it can be easy to forget checking the error |
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| 175 | code, which can lead to an error being quitely and implicitly ignored. |
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| 176 | Some new languages have tools that raise warnings if the return value is |
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| 177 | discarded to avoid this. |
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| 178 | It also puts more code on the main execution path. |
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| 179 | \item\emph{Special Return with Global Store}: |
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| 180 | A function that encounters an error returns some value indicating that it |
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| 181 | encountered a value but store which error occured in a fixed global location. |
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| 182 | |
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| 183 | Perhaps the C standard @errno@ is the most famous example of this, |
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| 184 | where some standard library functions will return some non-value (often a |
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| 185 | NULL pointer) and set @errno@. |
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| 186 | |
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| 187 | This avoids the multiple results issue encountered with straight error codes |
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| 188 | but otherwise many of the same advantages and disadvantages. |
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| 189 | It does however introduce one other major disadvantage: |
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| 190 | Everything that uses that global location must agree on all possible errors. |
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| 191 | \item\emph{Return Union}: |
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| 192 | Replaces error codes with a tagged union. |
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| 193 | Success is one tag and the errors are another. |
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| 194 | It is also possible to make each possible error its own tag and carry its own |
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| 195 | additional information, but the two branch format is easy to make generic |
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| 196 | so that one type can be used everywhere in error handling code. |
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| 197 | |
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| 198 | This pattern is very popular in functional or semi-functional language, |
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| 199 | anything with primitive support for tagged unions (or algebraic data types). |
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| 200 | % We need listing Rust/rust to format code snipits from it. |
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| 201 | % Rust's \code{rust}{Result<T, E>} |
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| 202 | |
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| 203 | The main disadvantage is again it puts code on the main execution path. |
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| 204 | This is also the first technique that allows for more information about an |
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| 205 | error, other than one of a fix-set of ids, to be sent. |
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| 206 | They can be missed but some languages can force that they are checked. |
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| 207 | It is also implicitly forced in any languages with checked union access. |
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| 208 | \item\emph{Handler Functions}: |
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| 209 | On error the function that produced the error calls another function to |
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| 210 | handle it. |
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| 211 | The handler function can be provided locally (passed in as an argument, |
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| 212 | either directly as as a field of a structure/object) or globally (a global |
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| 213 | variable). |
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| 214 | |
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| 215 | C++ uses this as its fallback system if exception handling fails. |
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| 216 | \snake{std::terminate_handler} and for a time \snake{std::unexpected_handler} |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | Handler functions work a lot like resumption exceptions. |
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| 219 | The difference is they are more expencive to set up but cheaper to use, and |
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| 220 | so are more suited to more fequent errors. |
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| 221 | The exception being global handlers if they are rarely change as the time |
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| 222 | in both cases strinks towards zero. |
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| 223 | \end{itemize} |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | %\subsection |
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| 226 | Because of their cost exceptions are rarely used for hot paths of execution. |
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| 227 | There is an element of self-fulfilling prophocy here as implementation |
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| 228 | techniques have been designed to make exceptions cheap to set-up at the cost |
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| 229 | of making them expencive to use. |
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| 230 | Still, use of exceptions for other tasks is more common in higher-level |
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| 231 | scripting languages. |
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| 232 | An iconic example is Python's StopIteration exception which is thrown by |
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| 233 | an iterator to indicate that it is exausted. Combined with Python's heavy |
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| 234 | use of the iterator based for-loop. |
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| 235 | % https://docs.python.org/3/library/exceptions.html#StopIteration |
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