// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. use prelude::v1::*; use cell::UnsafeCell; use error::FromError; use fmt; use thread::Thread; pub struct Flag { failed: UnsafeCell } pub const FLAG_INIT: Flag = Flag { failed: UnsafeCell { value: false } }; impl Flag { #[inline] pub fn borrow(&self) -> LockResult { let ret = Guard { panicking: Thread::panicking() }; if unsafe { *self.failed.get() } { Err(new_poison_error(ret)) } else { Ok(ret) } } #[inline] pub fn done(&self, guard: &Guard) { if !guard.panicking && Thread::panicking() { unsafe { *self.failed.get() = true; } } } #[inline] pub fn get(&self) -> bool { unsafe { *self.failed.get() } } } #[allow(missing_copy_implementations)] pub struct Guard { panicking: bool, } /// A type of error which can be returned whenever a lock is acquired. /// /// Both Mutexes and RwLocks are poisoned whenever a task fails while the lock /// is held. The precise semantics for when a lock is poisoned is documented on /// each lock, but once a lock is poisoned then all future acquisitions will /// return this error. #[stable] pub struct PoisonError { guard: T, } /// An enumeration of possible errors which can occur while calling the /// `try_lock` method. #[stable] pub enum TryLockError { /// The lock could not be acquired because another task failed while holding /// the lock. #[stable] Poisoned(PoisonError), /// The lock could not be acquired at this time because the operation would /// otherwise block. #[stable] WouldBlock, } /// A type alias for the result of a lock method which can be poisoned. /// /// The `Ok` variant of this result indicates that the primitive was not /// poisoned, and the `Guard` is contained within. The `Err` variant indicates /// that the primitive was poisoned. Note that the `Err` variant *also* carries /// the associated guard, and it can be acquired through the `into_inner` /// method. #[stable] pub type LockResult = Result>; /// A type alias for the result of a nonblocking locking method. /// /// For more information, see `LockResult`. A `TryLockResult` doesn't /// necessarily hold the associated guard in the `Err` type as the lock may not /// have been acquired for other reasons. #[stable] pub type TryLockResult = Result>; impl fmt::Show for PoisonError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { "poisoned lock: another task failed inside".fmt(f) } } impl PoisonError { /// Consumes this error indicating that a lock is poisoned, returning the /// underlying guard to allow access regardless. #[deprecated="renamed to into_inner"] pub fn into_guard(self) -> T { self.guard } /// Consumes this error indicating that a lock is poisoned, returning the /// underlying guard to allow access regardless. #[unstable] pub fn into_inner(self) -> T { self.guard } /// Reaches into this error indicating that a lock is poisoned, returning a /// reference to the underlying guard to allow access regardless. #[unstable] pub fn get_ref(&self) -> &T { &self.guard } /// Reaches into this error indicating that a lock is poisoned, returning a /// mutable reference to the underlying guard to allow access regardless. #[unstable] pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T { &mut self.guard } } impl FromError> for TryLockError { fn from_error(err: PoisonError) -> TryLockError { TryLockError::Poisoned(err) } } impl fmt::Show for TryLockError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { match *self { TryLockError::Poisoned(ref p) => p.fmt(f), TryLockError::WouldBlock => { "try_lock failed because the operation would block".fmt(f) } } } } pub fn new_poison_error(guard: T) -> PoisonError { PoisonError { guard: guard } } pub fn map_result(result: LockResult, f: F) -> LockResult where F: FnOnce(T) -> U { match result { Ok(t) => Ok(f(t)), Err(PoisonError { guard }) => Err(new_poison_error(f(guard))) } }