Debug Mode¶
:local
Using Debug Mode¶
Libc++ provides a debug mode that enables assertions meant to detect incorrect usage of the standard library. By default these assertions are disabled but they can be enabled using the _LIBCPP_DEBUG macro.
_LIBCPP_DEBUG Macro¶
- _LIBCPP_DEBUG:
This macro is used to enable assertions and iterator debugging checks within libc++. By default it is undefined.
Values: 0, 1
Defining _LIBCPP_DEBUG to 0 or greater enables most of libc++’s assertions. Defining _LIBCPP_DEBUG to 1 enables “iterator debugging” which provides additional assertions about the validity of iterators used by the program.
Note that this option has no effect on libc++’s ABI
- _LIBCPP_DEBUG_USE_EXCEPTIONS:
- When this macro is defined _LIBCPP_ASSERT failures throw __libcpp_debug_exception instead of aborting. Additionally this macro disables exception specifications on functions containing _LIBCPP_ASSERT checks. This allows assertion failures to correctly throw through these functions.
Handling Assertion Failures¶
When a debug assertion fails the assertion handler is called via the std::__libcpp_debug_function function pointer. It is possible to override this function pointer using a different handler function. Libc++ provides two different assertion handlers, the default handler std::__libcpp_abort_debug_handler which aborts the program, and std::__libcpp_throw_debug_handler which throws an instance of std::__libcpp_debug_exception. Libc++ can be changed to use the throwing assertion handler as follows:
#define _LIBCPP_DEBUG 1
#include <string>
int main() {
std::__libcpp_debug_function = std::__libcpp_throw_debug_function;
try {
std::string::iterator bad_it;
std::string str("hello world");
str.insert(bad_it, '!'); // causes debug assertion
} catch (std::__libcpp_debug_exception const&) {
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
Debug Mode Checks¶
Libc++’s debug mode offers two levels of checking. The first enables various precondition checks throughout libc++. The second additionally enables “iterator debugging” which checks the validity of iterators used by the program.
Basic Checks¶
These checks are enabled when _LIBCPP_DEBUG is defined to either 0 or 1.
The following checks are enabled by _LIBCPP_DEBUG:
- FIXME: Update this list
Iterator Debugging Checks¶
These checks are enabled when _LIBCPP_DEBUG is defined to 1.
The following containers and STL classes support iterator debugging:
- std::string
- std::vector<T> (T != bool)
- std::list
- std::unordered_map
- std::unordered_multimap
- std::unordered_set
- std::unordered_multiset
The remaining containers do not currently support iterator debugging. Patches welcome.