abort
and unwind
The previous section illustrates the error handling mechanism panic
. Different code paths can be conditionally compiled based on the panic setting. The current values available are unwind
and abort
.
Building on the prior lemonade example, we explicitly use the panic strategy to exercise different lines of code.
fn drink(beverage: &str) { // You shouldn't drink too much sugary beverages. if beverage == "lemonade" { if cfg!(panic="abort"){ println!("This is not your party. Run!!!!");} else{ println!("Spit it out!!!!");} } else{ println!("Some refreshing {} is all I need.", beverage); } } fn main() { drink("water"); drink("lemonade"); }
Here is another example focusing on rewriting drink()
and explicitly use the unwind
keyword.
#[cfg(panic = "unwind")] fn ah(){ println!("Spit it out!!!!");} #[cfg(not(panic="unwind"))] fn ah(){ println!("This is not your party. Run!!!!");} fn drink(beverage: &str){ if beverage == "lemonade"{ ah();} else{println!("Some refreshing {} is all I need.", beverage);} } fn main() { drink("water"); drink("lemonade"); }
The panic strategy can be set from the command line by using abort
or unwind
.
rustc lemonade.rs -C panic=abort