On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 09:24:27AM -0700, Jeff Law wrote: > On 11/11/13 02:33, Eric Botcazou wrote: > >>However, that brings up an couple interesting questions. > >> > >>Let's say we find a NULL pointer which reaches a return statement in a > >>function which is marked as returns_nonnull. In that case there is no > >>dereference. Presumably for that kind of scenario we'll just keep the > >>builtin trap. > >> > >>Similarly, assume we extend this pass to detect out-of-bounds array > >>indexing. It's fairly simple to do and has always been in my plan. In > >>that case leaving in the array indexing won't necessarily generate a > >>fault. For those presumably we'll just want the builtin_trap as well? > >> > >>Again, I don't mind inserting a *0, I just want to have a plan for the > >>other undefined behaviours we currently detect and those which I plan on > >>catching soon. > > > >The more general problem is that, with -fnon-call-exceptions, we really > >expect > >a fully-fledged exception to be raised when something goes wrong. Inserting > >__builtin_trap doesn't work because it's simply not equivalent to a throw. > >In > >other words, if __builtin_throw would be inserted instead of __builtin_trap > >with -fnon-call-exceptions, things would probably be acceptable as-is. > Hmm, maybe that's a better soultion then. When non-call-exceptions > is active, throw rather than trap.
But throw what? It is up to the runtimes of -fnon-call-exceptions languages to decide if they actually want to throw or do something else in the signal handlers, and what exactly to throw. Jakub