1 | \chapter{Introduction} |
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2 | |
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3 | % The highest level overview of Cforall and EHMs. Get this done right away. |
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4 | This thesis covers the design and implementation of the exception handling |
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5 | mechanism (EHM) of |
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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, which 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 large control-flow jumps. |
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11 | |
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12 | % Now take a step back and explain what exceptions are generally. |
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13 | A language's EHM is a combination of language syntax and run-time |
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14 | components that are used to construct, raise, and handle exceptions, |
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15 | including all control flow. |
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16 | Exceptions are an active mechanism for replacing passive error/return codes and return unions (Go and Rust). |
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17 | Exception handling provides dynamic inter-function control flow. |
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18 | There are two forms of exception handling covered in this thesis: |
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19 | termination, which acts as a multi-level return, |
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20 | and resumption, which is a dynamic function call. |
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21 | % PAB: Maybe this sentence was suppose to be deleted? |
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22 | Termination handling is much more common, |
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23 | to the extent that it is often seen as the only form of handling. |
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24 | % PAB: I like this sentence better than the next sentence. |
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25 | % This separation is uncommon because termination exception handling is so |
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26 | % much more common that it is often assumed. |
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27 | % WHY: Mention other forms of continuation and \cite{CommonLisp} here? |
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28 | |
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29 | Exception handling relies on the concept of nested functions to create handlers that deal with exceptions. |
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30 | \begin{center} |
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31 | \begin{tabular}[t]{ll} |
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32 | \begin{lstlisting}[aboveskip=0pt,belowskip=0pt,language=CFA,{moredelim=**[is][\color{red}]{@}{@}}] |
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33 | void f( void (*hp)() ) { |
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34 | hp(); |
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35 | } |
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36 | void g( void (*hp)() ) { |
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37 | f( hp ); |
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38 | } |
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39 | void h( int @i@, void (*hp)() ) { |
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40 | void @handler@() { // nested |
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41 | printf( "%d\n", @i@ ); |
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42 | } |
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43 | if ( i == 1 ) hp = handler; |
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44 | if ( i > 0 ) h( i - 1, hp ); |
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45 | else g( hp ); |
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46 | } |
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47 | h( 2, 0 ); |
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48 | \end{lstlisting} |
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49 | & |
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50 | \raisebox{-0.5\totalheight}{\input{handler}} |
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51 | \end{tabular} |
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52 | \end{center} |
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53 | The nested function @handler@ in the second stack frame is explicitly passed to function @f@. |
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54 | When this handler is called in @f@, it uses the parameter @i@ in the second stack frame, which is accessible by an implicit lexical-link pointer. |
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55 | Setting @hp@ in @h@ at different points in the recursion, results in invoking a different handler. |
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56 | Exception handling extends this idea by eliminating explicit handler passing, and instead, performing a stack search for a handler that matches some criteria (conditional dynamic call), and calls the handler at the top of the stack. |
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57 | It is the runtime search $O(N)$ that differentiates an EHM call (raise) from normal dynamic call $O(1)$ via a function or virtual-member pointer. |
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58 | |
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59 | Termination exception handling searches the stack for a handler, unwinds the stack to the frame containing the matching handler, and calling the handler at the top of the stack. |
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60 | \begin{center} |
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61 | \input{termination} |
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62 | \end{center} |
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63 | Note, since the handler can reference variables in @h@, @h@ must remain on the stack for the handler call. |
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64 | After the handler returns, control continues after the lexical location of the handler in @h@ (static return)~\cite[p.~108]{Tennent77}. |
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65 | Unwinding allows recover to any previous |
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66 | function on the stack, skipping any functions between it and the |
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67 | function containing the matching handler. |
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68 | |
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69 | Resumption exception handling searches the stack for a handler, does \emph{not} unwind the stack to the frame containing the matching handler, and calls the handler at the top of the stack. |
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70 | \begin{center} |
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71 | \input{resumption} |
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72 | \end{center} |
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73 | After the handler returns, control continues after the resume in @f@ (dynamic return). |
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74 | Not unwinding allows fix up of the problem in @f@ by any previous function on the stack, without disrupting the current set of stack frames. |
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75 | |
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76 | Although a powerful feature, exception handling tends to be complex to set up |
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77 | and expensive to use |
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78 | so it is often limited to unusual or ``exceptional" cases. |
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79 | The classic example is error handling, where exceptions are used to |
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80 | remove error handling logic from the main execution path, while paying |
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81 | most of the cost only when the error actually occurs. |
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82 | |
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83 | \section{Thesis Overview} |
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84 | This work describes the design and implementation of the \CFA EHM. |
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85 | The \CFA EHM implements all of the common exception features (or an |
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86 | equivalent) found in most other EHMs and adds some features of its own. |
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87 | The design of all the features had to be adapted to \CFA's feature set as |
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88 | some of the underlying tools used to implement and express exception handling |
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89 | in other languages are absent in \CFA. |
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90 | Still the resulting basic syntax resembles that of other languages: |
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91 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=CFA,{moredelim=**[is][\color{red}]{@}{@}}] |
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92 | @try@ { |
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93 | ... |
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94 | T * object = malloc(request_size); |
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95 | if (!object) { |
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96 | @throw@ OutOfMemory{fixed_allocation, request_size}; |
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97 | } |
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98 | ... |
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99 | } @catch@ (OutOfMemory * error) { |
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100 | ... |
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101 | } |
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102 | \end{lstlisting} |
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103 | % A note that yes, that was a very fast overview. |
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104 | The design and implementation of all of \CFA's EHM's features are |
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105 | described in detail throughout this thesis, whether they are a common feature |
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106 | or one unique to \CFA. |
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107 | |
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108 | % The current state of the project and what it contributes. |
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109 | The majority of the \CFA EHM is implemented in \CFA, except for a small amount of assembler code. |
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110 | In addition, |
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111 | a suite of tests and performance benchmarks were created as part of this project. |
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112 | The \CFA implementation techniques are generally applicable in other programming |
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113 | languages and much of the design is as well. |
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114 | Some parts of the EHM use features unique to \CFA, and hence, |
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115 | are harder to replicate in other programming languages. |
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116 | % Talk about other programming languages. |
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117 | Three well known programming languages with EHMs, %/exception handling |
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118 | C++, Java and Python are examined in the performance work. However, these languages focus on termination |
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119 | exceptions, so there is no comparison with resumption. |
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120 | |
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121 | The contributions of this work are: |
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122 | \begin{enumerate} |
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123 | \item Designing \CFA's exception handling mechanism, adapting designs from |
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124 | other programming languages, and creating new features. |
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125 | \item Implementing stack unwinding for the \CFA EHM, including updating |
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126 | the \CFA compiler and run-time environment to generate and execute the EHM code. |
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127 | \item Designing and implementing a prototype virtual system. |
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128 | % I think the virtual system and per-call site default handlers are the only |
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129 | % "new" features, everything else is a matter of implementation. |
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130 | \item Creating tests and performance benchmarks to compare with EHM's in other languages. |
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131 | \end{enumerate} |
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132 | |
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133 | %\todo{I can't figure out a good lead-in to the roadmap.} |
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134 | The thesis is organization as follows. |
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135 | The next section and parts of \autoref{c:existing} cover existing EHMs. |
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136 | New \CFA EHM features are introduced in \autoref{c:features}, |
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137 | covering their usage and design. |
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138 | That is followed by the implementation of these features in |
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139 | \autoref{c:implement}. |
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140 | Performance results are presented in \autoref{c:performance}. |
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141 | Summing up and possibilities for extending this project are discussed in \autoref{c:future}. |
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142 | |
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143 | \section{Background} |
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144 | \label{s:background} |
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145 | |
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146 | Exception handling is a well examined area in programming languages, |
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147 | with papers on the subject dating back the 70s~\cite{Goodenough75}. |
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148 | Early exceptions were often treated as signals, which carried no information |
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149 | except their identity. Ada~\cite{Ada} still uses this system. |
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150 | |
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151 | The modern flag-ship for termination exceptions is \Cpp, |
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152 | which added them in its first major wave of non-object-orientated features |
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153 | in 1990. |
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154 | % https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/history |
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155 | While many EHMs have special exception types, |
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156 | \Cpp has the ability to use any type as an exception. |
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157 | However, this generality is not particularly useful, and has been pushed aside for classes, with a convention of inheriting from |
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158 | \code{C++}{std::exception}. |
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159 | While \Cpp has a special catch-all syntax @catch(...)@, there is no way to discriminate its exception type, so nothing can |
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160 | be done with the caught value because nothing is known about it. |
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161 | Instead the base exception-type \code{C++}{std::exception} is defined with common functionality (such as |
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162 | the ability to print a message when the exception is raised but not caught) and all |
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163 | exceptions have this functionality. |
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164 | Having a root exception-type seems to be the standard now, as the guaranteed functionality is worth |
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165 | any lost in flexibility from limiting exceptions types to classes. |
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166 | |
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167 | Java~\cite{Java} was the next popular language to use exceptions. |
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168 | Its exception system largely reflects that of \Cpp, except it requires |
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169 | exceptions to be a subtype of \code{Java}{java.lang.Throwable} |
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170 | and it uses checked exceptions. |
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171 | Checked exceptions are part of a function's interface defining all exceptions it or its called functions raise. |
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172 | Using this information, it is possible to statically verify if a handler exists for all raised exception, \ie no uncaught exceptions. |
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173 | Making exception information explicit, improves clarity and |
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174 | safety, but can slow down programming. |
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175 | For example, programming complexity increases when dealing with high-order methods or an overly specified |
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176 | throws clause. However some of the issues are more |
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177 | programming annoyances, such as writing/updating many exception signatures after adding or remove calls. |
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178 | Java programmers have developed multiple programming ``hacks'' to circumvent checked exceptions negating the robustness it is suppose to provide. |
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179 | For example, the ``catch-and-ignore" pattern, where the handler is empty because the exception does not appear relevant to the programmer versus |
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180 | repairing or recovering from the exception. |
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181 | |
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182 | %\subsection |
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183 | Resumption exceptions are less popular, |
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184 | although resumption is as old as termination; |
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185 | hence, few |
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186 | programming languages have implemented them. |
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187 | % http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdf/xerox/parc/techReports/ |
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188 | % CSL-79-3_Mesa_Language_Manual_Version_5.0.pdf |
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189 | Mesa~\cite{Mesa} is one programming languages that did. Experience with Mesa |
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190 | is quoted as being one of the reasons resumptions are not |
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191 | included in the \Cpp standard. |
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192 | % https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exception_handling |
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193 | As a result, resumption has ignored in main-stream programming languages. |
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194 | However, ``what goes around comes around'' and resumption is being revisited now (like user-level threading). |
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195 | While rejecting resumption might have been the right decision in the past, there are decades |
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196 | of developments in computer science that have changed the situation. |
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197 | Some of these developments, such as functional programming's resumption |
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198 | equivalent, algebraic effects\cite{Zhang19}, are enjoying significant success. |
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199 | A complete reexamination of resumptions is beyond this thesis, but their re-emergence is |
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200 | enough to try them in \CFA. |
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201 | % Especially considering how much easier they are to implement than |
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202 | % termination exceptions. |
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203 | |
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204 | %\subsection |
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205 | Functional languages tend to use other solutions for their primary EHM, |
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206 | but exception-like constructs still appear. |
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207 | Termination appears in error construct, which marks the result of an |
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208 | expression as an error; thereafter, the result of any expression that tries to use it is also an |
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209 | error, and so on until an appropriate handler is reached. |
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210 | Resumption appears in algebraic effects, where a function dispatches its |
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211 | side-effects to its caller for handling. |
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212 | |
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213 | %\subsection |
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214 | Some programming languages have moved to a restricted kind of EHM |
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215 | called ``panic". |
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216 | In Rust~\cite{Rust}, a panic is just a program level abort that may be implemented by |
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217 | unwinding the stack like in termination exception handling. |
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218 | % https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/panic/fn.catch_unwind.html |
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219 | In Go~\cite{Go}, a panic is very similar to a termination, except it only supports |
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220 | a catch-all by calling \code{Go}{recover()}, simplifying the interface at |
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221 | the cost of flexibility. |
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222 | |
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223 | %\subsection |
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224 | While exception handling's most common use cases are in error handling, |
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225 | here are other ways to handle errors with comparisons to exceptions. |
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226 | \begin{itemize} |
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227 | \item\emph{Error Codes}: |
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228 | This pattern has a function return an enumeration (or just a set of fixed values) to indicate |
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229 | if an error occurred and possibly which error it was. |
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230 | |
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231 | Error codes mix exceptional and normal values, artificially enlarging the type and/or value range. |
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232 | Some languages address this issue by returning multiple values or a tuple, separating the error code from the function result. |
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233 | However, the main issue with error codes is forgetting to checking them, |
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234 | which leads to an error being quietly and implicitly ignored. |
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235 | Some new languages have tools that issue warnings, if the error code is |
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236 | discarded to avoid this problem. |
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237 | Checking error codes also results in bloating the main execution path, especially if an error is not dealt with locally and has to be cascaded down the call stack to a higher-level function.. |
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238 | |
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239 | \item\emph{Special Return with Global Store}: |
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240 | Some functions only return a boolean indicating success or failure |
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241 | and store the exact reason for the error in a fixed global location. |
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242 | For example, many C routines return non-zero or -1, indicating success or failure, |
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243 | and write error details into the C standard variable @errno@. |
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244 | |
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245 | This approach avoids the multiple results issue encountered with straight error codes |
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246 | but otherwise has many (if not more) of the disadvantages. |
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247 | For example, everything that uses the global location must agree on all possible errors and global variable are unsafe with concurrency. |
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248 | |
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249 | \item\emph{Return Union}: |
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250 | This pattern replaces error codes with a tagged union. |
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251 | Success is one tag and the errors are another. |
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252 | It is also possible to make each possible error its own tag and carry its own |
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253 | additional information, but the two branch format is easy to make generic |
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254 | so that one type can be used everywhere in error handling code. |
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255 | |
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256 | This pattern is very popular in functional or any semi-functional language with |
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257 | primitive support for tagged unions (or algebraic data types). |
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258 | % We need listing Rust/rust to format code snipits from it. |
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259 | % Rust's \code{rust}{Result<T, E>} |
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260 | The main advantage is providing for more information about an |
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261 | error, other than one of a fix-set of ids. |
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262 | While some languages use checked union access to force error-code checking, |
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263 | it is still possible to bypass the checking. |
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264 | The main disadvantage is again significant error code on the main execution path and cascading through called functions. |
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265 | |
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266 | \item\emph{Handler Functions}: |
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267 | This pattern implicitly associates functions with errors. |
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268 | On error, the function that produced the error implicitly calls another function to |
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269 | handle it. |
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270 | The handler function can be provided locally (passed in as an argument, |
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271 | either directly as as a field of a structure/object) or globally (a global |
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272 | variable). |
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273 | C++ uses this approach as its fallback system if exception handling fails, \eg |
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274 | \snake{std::terminate_handler} and for a time \snake{std::unexpected_handler} |
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275 | |
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276 | Handler functions work a lot like resumption exceptions, without the dynamic handler search. |
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277 | Therefore, setting setting up the handler can be more complex/expensive, especially if the handle must be passed through multiple function calls, but cheaper to call $O(1)$, and hence, |
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278 | are more suited to frequent exceptional situations. |
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279 | % The exception being global handlers if they are rarely change as the time |
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280 | % in both cases shrinks towards zero. |
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281 | \end{itemize} |
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282 | |
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283 | %\subsection |
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284 | Because of their cost, exceptions are rarely used for hot paths of execution. |
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285 | Therefore, there is an element of self-fulfilling prophecy for implementation |
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286 | techniques to make exceptions cheap to set-up at the cost |
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287 | of expensive usage. |
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288 | This cost differential is less important in higher-level scripting languages, where use of exceptions for other tasks is more common. |
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289 | An iconic example is Python's @StopIteration@ exception that is thrown by |
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290 | an iterator to indicate that it is exhausted, especially when combined with Python's heavy |
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291 | use of the iterator-based for-loop. |
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292 | % https://docs.python.org/3/library/exceptions.html#StopIteration |
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