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// Copyright (c) 2019-2021 The Bitcoin Core developers
// Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying
// file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php.
#ifndef BITCOIN_UTIL_CHECK_H
#define BITCOIN_UTIL_CHECK_H
#include <attributes.h>
#include <stdexcept>
#include <utility>
std::string StrFormatInternalBug(const char* msg, const char* file, int line, const char* func);
class NonFatalCheckError : public std::runtime_error
{
public:
NonFatalCheckError(const char* msg, const char* file, int line, const char* func);
};
#define STR_INTERNAL_BUG(msg) StrFormatInternalBug((msg), __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__)
/** Helper for CHECK_NONFATAL() */
template <typename T>
T&& inline_check_non_fatal(LIFETIMEBOUND T&& val, const char* file, int line, const char* func, const char* assertion)
{
if (!val) {
throw NonFatalCheckError{assertion, file, line, func};
}
return std::forward<T>(val);
}
/**
* Identity function. Throw a NonFatalCheckError when the condition evaluates to false
*
* This should only be used
* - where the condition is assumed to be true, not for error handling or validating user input
* - where a failure to fulfill the condition is recoverable and does not abort the program
*
* For example in RPC code, where it is undesirable to crash the whole program, this can be generally used to replace
* asserts or recoverable logic errors. A NonFatalCheckError in RPC code is caught and passed as a string to the RPC
* caller, which can then report the issue to the developers.
*/
#define CHECK_NONFATAL(condition) \
inline_check_non_fatal(condition, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, #condition)
#if defined(NDEBUG)
#error "Cannot compile without assertions!"
#endif
/** Helper for Assert() */
void assertion_fail(const char* file, int line, const char* func, const char* assertion);
/** Helper for Assert()/Assume() */
template <bool IS_ASSERT, typename T>
T&& inline_assertion_check(LIFETIMEBOUND T&& val, [[maybe_unused]] const char* file, [[maybe_unused]] int line, [[maybe_unused]] const char* func, [[maybe_unused]] const char* assertion)
{
if constexpr (IS_ASSERT
#ifdef ABORT_ON_FAILED_ASSUME
|| true
#endif
) {
if (!val) {
assertion_fail(file, line, func, assertion);
}
}
return std::forward<T>(val);
}
/** Identity function. Abort if the value compares equal to zero */
#define Assert(val) inline_assertion_check<true>(val, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, #val)
/**
* Assume is the identity function.
*
* - Should be used to run non-fatal checks. In debug builds it behaves like
* Assert()/assert() to notify developers and testers about non-fatal errors.
* In production it doesn't warn or log anything.
* - For fatal errors, use Assert().
* - For non-fatal errors in interactive sessions (e.g. RPC or command line
* interfaces), CHECK_NONFATAL() might be more appropriate.
*/
#define Assume(val) inline_assertion_check<false>(val, __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, #val)
/**
* NONFATAL_UNREACHABLE() is a macro that is used to mark unreachable code. It throws a NonFatalCheckError.
*/
#define NONFATAL_UNREACHABLE() \
throw NonFatalCheckError( \
"Unreachable code reached (non-fatal)", __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__)
#endif // BITCOIN_UTIL_CHECK_H
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