1995-08-09 08:06:35 -07:00
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(***********************************************************************)
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(* *)
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(* OCaml *)
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1995-08-09 08:06:35 -07:00
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(* *)
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(* Xavier Leroy, projet Cristal, INRIA Rocquencourt *)
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(* *)
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1996-04-30 07:53:58 -07:00
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(* Copyright 1996 Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et *)
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(* en Automatique. All rights reserved. This file is distributed *)
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(* under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License, with *)
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(* the special exception on linking described in file ../LICENSE. *)
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1995-08-09 08:06:35 -07:00
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(* *)
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(***********************************************************************)
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(** Facilities for printing exceptions. *)
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val to_string: exn -> string
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(** [Printexc.to_string e] returns a string representation of
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the exception [e]. *)
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val print: ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b
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(** [Printexc.print fn x] applies [fn] to [x] and returns the result.
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If the evaluation of [fn x] raises any exception, the
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name of the exception is printed on standard error output,
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and the exception is raised again.
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The typical use is to catch and report exceptions that
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escape a function application. *)
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val catch: ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b
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(** [Printexc.catch fn x] is similar to {!Printexc.print}, but
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aborts the program with exit code 2 after printing the
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uncaught exception. This function is deprecated: the runtime
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system is now able to print uncaught exceptions as precisely
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as [Printexc.catch] does. Moreover, calling [Printexc.catch]
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makes it harder to track the location of the exception
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using the debugger or the stack backtrace facility.
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So, do not use [Printexc.catch] in new code. *)
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val print_backtrace: out_channel -> unit
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(** [Printexc.print_backtrace oc] prints an exception backtrace
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on the output channel [oc]. The backtrace lists the program
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locations where the most-recently raised exception was raised
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and where it was propagated through function calls.
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@since 3.11.0
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*)
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val get_backtrace: unit -> string
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(** [Printexc.get_backtrace ()] returns a string containing the
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same exception backtrace that [Printexc.print_backtrace] would
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print.
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@since 3.11.0
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*)
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val record_backtrace: bool -> unit
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(** [Printexc.record_backtrace b] turns recording of exception backtraces
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on (if [b = true]) or off (if [b = false]). Initially, backtraces
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are not recorded, unless the [b] flag is given to the program
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through the [OCAMLRUNPARAM] variable.
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@since 3.11.0
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*)
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val backtrace_status: unit -> bool
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(** [Printexc.backtrace_status()] returns [true] if exception
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backtraces are currently recorded, [false] if not.
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@since 3.11.0
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*)
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val register_printer: (exn -> string option) -> unit
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(** [Printexc.register_printer fn] registers [fn] as an exception
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printer. The printer should return [None] or raise an exception
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if it does not know how to convert the passed exception, and [Some
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s] with [s] the resulting string if it can convert the passed
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exception. Exceptions raised by the printer are ignored.
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When converting an exception into a string, the printers will be invoked
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in the reverse order of their registrations, until a printer returns
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a [Some s] value (if no such printer exists, the runtime will use a
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generic printer).
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When using this mechanism, one should be aware that an exception backtrace
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is attached to the thread that saw it raised, rather than to the exception
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itself. Practically, it means that the code related to [fn] should not use
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the backtrace if it has itself raised an exception before.
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@since 3.11.2
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*)
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(** {6 Raw backtraces} *)
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type raw_backtrace
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(** The abstract type [backtrace] stores exception backtraces in
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a low-level format, instead of directly exposing them as string as
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the [get_backtrace()] function does.
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This allows to pay the performance overhead of representation
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conversion and formatting only at printing time, which is useful
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if you want to record more backtrace than you actually print.
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*)
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val get_raw_backtrace: unit -> raw_backtrace
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val print_raw_backtrace: out_channel -> raw_backtrace -> unit
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val raw_backtrace_to_string: raw_backtrace -> string
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