;; cold-loadable code. -- WHN 19990928
(declare (notinline sb!xc:find-class))
(find-class 'condition)))
- #'(lambda (cond stream)
- (format stream "Condition ~S was signalled." (type-of cond))))
+ (lambda (cond stream)
+ (format stream "Condition ~S was signalled." (type-of cond))))
(eval-when (:compile-toplevel :load-toplevel :execute)
(let* ((cpl (remove-duplicates
(reverse
(reduce #'append
- (mapcar #'(lambda (x)
- (condition-class-cpl
- (sb!xc:find-class x)))
+ (mapcar (lambda (x)
+ (condition-class-cpl
+ (sb!xc:find-class x)))
parent-types)))))
(cond-layout (info :type :compiler-layout 'condition))
(olayout (info :type :compiler-layout name))
(let ((name (condition-slot-name slot)))
(dolist (reader (condition-slot-readers slot))
(setf (fdefinition reader)
- #'(lambda (condition)
- (condition-reader-function condition name))))
+ (lambda (condition)
+ (condition-reader-function condition name))))
(dolist (writer (condition-slot-writers slot))
(setf (fdefinition writer)
- #'(lambda (new-value condition)
- (condition-writer-function condition new-value name))))))
+ (lambda (new-value condition)
+ (condition-writer-function condition new-value name))))))
;; Compute effective slots and set up the class and hairy slots
;; (subsets of the effective slots.)
(setq report
(if (stringp arg)
`#'(lambda (condition stream)
- (declare (ignore condition))
- (write-string ,arg stream))
+ (declare (ignore condition))
+ (write-string ,arg stream))
`#'(lambda (condition stream)
- (funcall #',arg condition stream))))))
+ (funcall #',arg condition stream))))))
(:default-initargs
(do ((initargs (rest option) (cddr initargs)))
((endp initargs))
(define-condition namestring-parse-error (parse-error)
((complaint :reader namestring-parse-error-complaint :initarg :complaint)
- (arguments :reader namestring-parse-error-arguments :initarg :arguments
- :initform nil)
+ (args :reader namestring-parse-error-args :initarg :args :initform nil)
(namestring :reader namestring-parse-error-namestring :initarg :namestring)
(offset :reader namestring-parse-error-offset :initarg :offset))
(:report
(format stream
"parse error in namestring: ~?~% ~A~% ~V@T^"
(namestring-parse-error-complaint condition)
- (namestring-parse-error-arguments condition)
+ (namestring-parse-error-args condition)
(namestring-parse-error-namestring condition)
(namestring-parse-error-offset condition)))))
(stream-error-stream condition)
(reader-eof-error-context condition)))))
\f
+;;;; special SBCL extension conditions
+
+;;; an error apparently caused by a bug in SBCL itself
+;;;
+;;; Note that we don't make any serious effort to use this condition
+;;; for *all* errors in SBCL itself. E.g. type errors and array
+;;; indexing errors can occur in functions called from SBCL code, and
+;;; will just end up as ordinary TYPE-ERROR or invalid index error,
+;;; because the signalling code has no good way to know that the
+;;; underlying problem is a bug in SBCL. But in the fairly common case
+;;; that the signalling code does know that it's found a bug in SBCL,
+;;; this condition is appropriate, reusing boilerplate and helping
+;;; users to recognize it as an SBCL bug.
+(define-condition bug (simple-error)
+ ()
+ (:report
+ (lambda (condition stream)
+ (format stream
+ "~@< ~? ~:@_~?~:>"
+ (simple-condition-format-control condition)
+ (simple-condition-format-arguments condition)
+ "~@<This is probably a bug in SBCL itself. (Alternatively, ~
+ SBCL might have been corrupted by bad user code, e.g. by an ~
+ undefined Lisp operation like ~S, or by stray pointers from ~
+ alien code or from unsafe Lisp code; or there might be a bug ~
+ in the OS or hardware that SBCL is running on.) If it seems to ~
+ be a bug in SBCL itself, the maintainers would like to know ~
+ about it. Bug reports are welcome on the SBCL ~
+ mailing lists, which you can find at ~
+ <http://sbcl.sourceforge.net/>.~:@>"
+ '((fmakunbound 'compile))))))
+(defun bug (format-control &rest format-arguments)
+ (error 'bug
+ :format-control format-control
+ :format-arguments format-arguments))
+
+;;; a condition for use in stubs for operations which aren't supported
+;;; on some platforms
+;;;
+;;; E.g. in sbcl-0.7.0.5, it might be appropriate to do something like
+;;; #-(or freebsd linux)
+;;; (defun load-foreign (&rest rest)
+;;; (error 'unsupported-operator :name 'load-foreign))
+;;; #+(or freebsd linux)
+;;; (defun load-foreign ... actual definition ...)
+;;; By signalling a standard condition in this case, we make it
+;;; possible for test code to distinguish between (1) intentionally
+;;; unimplemented and (2) unintentionally just screwed up somehow.
+;;; (Before this condition was defined, test code tried to deal with
+;;; this by checking for FBOUNDP, but that didn't work reliably. In
+;;; sbcl-0.7.0, a a package screwup left the definition of
+;;; LOAD-FOREIGN in the wrong package, so it was unFBOUNDP even on
+;;; architectures where it was supposed to be supported, and the
+;;; regression tests cheerfully passed because they assumed that
+;;; unFBOUNDPness meant they were running on an system which didn't
+;;; support the extension.)
+(define-condition unsupported-operator (cell-error) ()
+ (:report
+ (lambda (condition stream)
+ (format stream
+ "unsupported on this platform (OS, CPU, whatever): ~S"
+ (cell-error-name condition)))))
+\f
;;;; restart definitions
(define-condition abort-failure (control-error) ()