- //===- ErrorHandler.h -------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===// 
- // 
- // Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions. 
- // See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information. 
- // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception 
- // 
- //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 
- // 
- // We designed lld's error handlers with the following goals in mind: 
- // 
- //  - Errors can occur at any place where we handle user input, but we don't 
- //    want them to affect the normal execution path too much. Ideally, 
- //    handling errors should be as simple as reporting them and exit (but 
- //    without actually doing exit). 
- // 
- //    In particular, the design to wrap all functions that could fail with 
- //    ErrorOr<T> is rejected because otherwise we would have to wrap a large 
- //    number of functions in lld with ErrorOr. With that approach, if some 
- //    function F can fail, not only F but all functions that transitively call 
- //    F have to be wrapped with ErrorOr. That seemed too much. 
- // 
- //  - Finding only one error at a time is not sufficient. We want to find as 
- //    many errors as possible with one execution of the linker. That means the 
- //    linker needs to keep running after a first error and give up at some 
- //    checkpoint (beyond which it would find cascading, false errors caused by 
- //    the previous errors). 
- // 
- //  - We want a simple interface to report errors. Unlike Clang, the data we 
- //    handle is compiled binary, so we don't need an error reporting mechanism 
- //    that's as sophisticated as the one that Clang has. 
- // 
- // The current lld's error handling mechanism is simple: 
- // 
- //  - When you find an error, report it using error() and continue as far as 
- //    you can. An internal error counter is incremented by one every time you 
- //    call error(). 
- // 
- //    A common idiom to handle an error is calling error() and then returning 
- //    a reasonable default value. For example, if your function handles a 
- //    user-supplied alignment value, and if you find an invalid alignment 
- //    (e.g. 17 which is not 2^n), you may report it using error() and continue 
- //    as if it were alignment 1 (which is the simplest reasonable value). 
- // 
- //    Note that you should not continue with an invalid value; that breaks the 
- //    internal consistency. You need to maintain all variables have some sane 
- //    value even after an error occurred. So, when you have to continue with 
- //    some value, always use a dummy value. 
- // 
- //  - Find a reasonable checkpoint at where you want to stop the linker, and 
- //    add code to return from the function if errorCount() > 0. In most cases, 
- //    a checkpoint already exists, so you don't need to do anything for this. 
- // 
- // This interface satisfies all the goals that we mentioned above. 
- // 
- // You should never call fatal() except for reporting a corrupted input file. 
- // fatal() immediately terminates the linker, so the function is not desirable 
- // if you are using lld as a subroutine in other program, and with that you 
- // can find only one error at a time. 
- // 
- // warn() doesn't do anything but printing out a given message. 
- // 
- // It is not recommended to use llvm::outs() or lld::errs() directly in lld 
- // because they are not thread-safe. The functions declared in this file are 
- // thread-safe. 
- // 
- //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 
-   
- #ifndef LLD_COMMON_ERRORHANDLER_H 
- #define LLD_COMMON_ERRORHANDLER_H 
-   
- #include "lld/Common/LLVM.h" 
-   
- #include "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h" 
- #include "llvm/Support/Error.h" 
- #include "llvm/Support/FileOutputBuffer.h" 
- #include <mutex> 
-   
- namespace llvm { 
- class DiagnosticInfo; 
- class raw_ostream; 
- } 
-   
- namespace lld { 
-   
- llvm::raw_ostream &outs(); 
- llvm::raw_ostream &errs(); 
-   
- enum class ErrorTag { LibNotFound, SymbolNotFound }; 
-   
- class ErrorHandler { 
- public: 
-   ~ErrorHandler(); 
-   
-   void initialize(llvm::raw_ostream &stdoutOS, llvm::raw_ostream &stderrOS, 
-                   bool exitEarly, bool disableOutput); 
-   
-   uint64_t errorCount = 0; 
-   uint64_t errorLimit = 20; 
-   StringRef errorLimitExceededMsg = "too many errors emitted, stopping now"; 
-   StringRef errorHandlingScript; 
-   StringRef logName = "lld"; 
-   bool exitEarly = true; 
-   bool fatalWarnings = false; 
-   bool suppressWarnings = false; 
-   bool verbose = false; 
-   bool vsDiagnostics = false; 
-   bool disableOutput = false; 
-   std::function<void()> cleanupCallback; 
-   
-   void error(const Twine &msg); 
-   void error(const Twine &msg, ErrorTag tag, ArrayRef<StringRef> args); 
-   [[noreturn]] void fatal(const Twine &msg); 
-   void log(const Twine &msg); 
-   void message(const Twine &msg, llvm::raw_ostream &s); 
-   void warn(const Twine &msg); 
-   
-   raw_ostream &outs(); 
-   raw_ostream &errs(); 
-   void flushStreams(); 
-   
-   std::unique_ptr<llvm::FileOutputBuffer> outputBuffer; 
-   
- private: 
-   using Colors = raw_ostream::Colors; 
-   
-   std::string getLocation(const Twine &msg); 
-   void reportDiagnostic(StringRef location, Colors c, StringRef diagKind, 
-                         const Twine &msg); 
-   
-   // We want to separate multi-line messages with a newline. `sep` is "\n" 
-   // if the last messages was multi-line. Otherwise "". 
-   llvm::StringRef sep; 
-   
-   // We wrap stdout and stderr so that you can pass alternative stdout/stderr as 
-   // arguments to lld::*::link() functions. Since lld::outs() or lld::errs() can 
-   // be indirectly called from multiple threads, we protect them using a mutex. 
-   // In the future, we plan on supporting several concurrent linker contexts, 
-   // which explains why the mutex is not a global but part of this context. 
-   std::mutex mu; 
-   llvm::raw_ostream *stdoutOS{}; 
-   llvm::raw_ostream *stderrOS{}; 
- }; 
-   
- /// Returns the default error handler. 
- ErrorHandler &errorHandler(); 
-   
- void error(const Twine &msg); 
- void error(const Twine &msg, ErrorTag tag, ArrayRef<StringRef> args); 
- [[noreturn]] void fatal(const Twine &msg); 
- void log(const Twine &msg); 
- void message(const Twine &msg, llvm::raw_ostream &s = outs()); 
- void warn(const Twine &msg); 
- uint64_t errorCount(); 
-   
- [[noreturn]] void exitLld(int val); 
-   
- void diagnosticHandler(const llvm::DiagnosticInfo &di); 
- void checkError(Error e); 
-   
- // check functions are convenient functions to strip errors 
- // from error-or-value objects. 
- template <class T> T check(ErrorOr<T> e) { 
-   if (auto ec = e.getError()) 
-     fatal(ec.message()); 
-   return std::move(*e); 
- } 
-   
- template <class T> T check(Expected<T> e) { 
-   if (!e) 
-     fatal(llvm::toString(e.takeError())); 
-   return std::move(*e); 
- } 
-   
- // Don't move from Expected wrappers around references. 
- template <class T> T &check(Expected<T &> e) { 
-   if (!e) 
-     fatal(llvm::toString(e.takeError())); 
-   return *e; 
- } 
-   
- template <class T> 
- T check2(ErrorOr<T> e, llvm::function_ref<std::string()> prefix) { 
-   if (auto ec = e.getError()) 
-     fatal(prefix() + ": " + ec.message()); 
-   return std::move(*e); 
- } 
-   
- template <class T> 
- T check2(Expected<T> e, llvm::function_ref<std::string()> prefix) { 
-   if (!e) 
-     fatal(prefix() + ": " + toString(e.takeError())); 
-   return std::move(*e); 
- } 
-   
- inline std::string toString(const Twine &s) { return s.str(); } 
-   
- // To evaluate the second argument lazily, we use C macro. 
- #define CHECK(E, S) check2((E), [&] { return toString(S); }) 
-   
- } // namespace lld 
-   
- #endif 
-