| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117 | // Copyright 2018 The Abseil Authors.//// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.// You may obtain a copy of the License at////      https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0//// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and// limitations under the License.//// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------// File: failure_signal_handler.h// -----------------------------------------------------------------------------//// This file configures the Abseil *failure signal handler* to capture and dump// useful debugging information (such as a stacktrace) upon program failure.//// To use the failure signal handler, call `absl::InstallFailureSignalHandler()`// very early in your program, usually in the first few lines of main()://// int main(int argc, char** argv) {//   // Initialize the symbolizer to get a human-readable stack trace//   absl::InitializeSymbolizer(argv[0]);////   absl::FailureSignalHandlerOptions options;//   absl::InstallFailureSignalHandler(options);//   DoSomethingInteresting();//   return 0;// }//// Any program that raises a fatal signal (such as `SIGSEGV`, `SIGILL`,// `SIGFPE`, `SIGABRT`, `SIGTERM`, `SIGBUG`, and `SIGTRAP`) will call the// installed failure signal handler and provide debugging information to stderr.//// Note that you should *not* install the Abseil failure signal handler more// than once. You may, of course, have another (non-Abseil) failure signal// handler installed (which would be triggered if Abseil's failure signal// handler sets `call_previous_handler` to `true`).#ifndef ABSL_DEBUGGING_FAILURE_SIGNAL_HANDLER_H_#define ABSL_DEBUGGING_FAILURE_SIGNAL_HANDLER_H_namespace absl {// FailureSignalHandlerOptions//// Struct for holding `absl::InstallFailureSignalHandler()` configuration// options.struct FailureSignalHandlerOptions {  // If true, try to symbolize the stacktrace emitted on failure, provided that  // you have initialized a symbolizer for that purpose. (See symbolize.h for  // more information.)  bool symbolize_stacktrace = true;  // If true, try to run signal handlers on an alternate stack (if supported on  // the given platform). An alternate stack is useful for program crashes due  // to a stack overflow; by running on a alternate stack, the signal handler  // may run even when normal stack space has been exausted. The downside of  // using an alternate stack is that extra memory for the alternate stack needs  // to be pre-allocated.  bool use_alternate_stack = true;  // If positive, indicates the number of seconds after which the failure signal  // handler is invoked to abort the program. Setting such an alarm is useful in  // cases where the failure signal handler itself may become hung or  // deadlocked.  int alarm_on_failure_secs = 3;  // If true, call the previously registered signal handler for the signal that  // was received (if one was registered) after the existing signal handler  // runs. This mechanism can be used to chain signal handlers together.  //  // If false, the signal is raised to the default handler for that signal  // (which normally terminates the program).  //  // IMPORTANT: If true, the chained fatal signal handlers must not try to  // recover from the fatal signal. Instead, they should terminate the program  // via some mechanism, like raising the default handler for the signal, or by  // calling `_exit()`. Note that the failure signal handler may put parts of  // the Abseil library into a state from which they cannot recover.  bool call_previous_handler = false;  // If non-null, indicates a pointer to a callback function that will be called  // upon failure, with a std::string argument containing failure data. This function  // may be used as a hook to write failure data to a secondary location, such  // as a log file. This function may also be called with null data, as a hint  // to flush any buffered data before the program may be terminated. Consider  // flushing any buffered data in all calls to this function.  //  // Since this function runs within a signal handler, it should be  // async-signal-safe if possible.  // See http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal-safety.7.html  void (*writerfn)(const char*) = nullptr;};// InstallFailureSignalHandler()//// Installs a signal handler for the common failure signals `SIGSEGV`, `SIGILL`,// `SIGFPE`, `SIGABRT`, `SIGTERM`, `SIGBUG`, and `SIGTRAP` (provided they exist// on the given platform). The failure signal handler dumps program failure data// useful for debugging in an unspecified format to stderr. This data may// include the program counter, a stacktrace, and register information on some// systems; do not rely on an exact format for the output, as it is subject to// change.void InstallFailureSignalHandler(const FailureSignalHandlerOptions& options);namespace debugging_internal {const char* FailureSignalToString(int signo);}  // namespace debugging_internal}  // namespace absl#endif  // ABSL_DEBUGGING_FAILURE_SIGNAL_HANDLER_H_
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