/*******************************************************************************/ /* Copyright (C) 2008-2020 Jonathan Moore Liles (as "Non-Session-Manager") */ /* Copyright (C) 2020- Nils Hilbricht */ /* */ /* This file is part of New-Session-Manager */ /* */ /* New-Session-Manager is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify */ /* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by */ /* the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or */ /* (at your option) any later version. */ /* */ /* New-Session-Manager is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, */ /* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of */ /* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the */ /* GNU General Public License for more details. */ /* */ /* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License */ /* along with New-Session-Manager. If not, see .*/ /*******************************************************************************/ /* debug.h * * 11/21/2003 - Jonathan Moore Liles * * Debuging support. * * Disable by defining the preprocessor variable NDEBUG prior to inclusion. * * The following macros sould be defined as string literals * * name value * * __MODULE__ Name of module. eg. "libfoo" * * __FILE__ Name of file. eg. "foo.c" * * __FUNCTION__ Name of enclosing function. eg. "bar" * * (inteter literal) * __LINE__ Number of enclosing line. * * * __FILE__, and __LINE__ are automatically defined by standard CPP * implementations. __FUNCTION__ is more or less unique to GNU, and isn't * strictly a preprocessor macro, but rather a reserved word in the compiler. * There is a sed script available with this toolset that is able to fake * __FUNCTION__ (among other things) with an extra preprocesessing step. * * __MODULE__ is nonstandard and should be defined the enclosing program(s). * Autoconf defines PACKAGE as the module name, and these routines will use its * value instead if __MODULE__ is undefined. * * The following routines are provided (as macros) and take the same arguments * as printf(): * * MESSAGE( const char *format, ... ) * WARNING( const char *format, ... ) * FATAL( const char *format, ... ) * * Calling MESSAGE or WARNING prints the message to stderr along with module, * file and line information, as well as appropriate emphasis. Calling * FATAL will do the same, and then call abort() to end the program. It is * unwise to supply any of these marcros with arguments that produce side * effects. As, doing so will most likely result in Heisenbugs; program * behavior that changes when debugging is disabled. * */ #ifndef _DEBUG_H #define _DEBUG_H #ifndef __MODULE__ #ifdef PACKAGE #define __MODULE__ PACKAGE #else #define __MODULE__ NULL #endif #endif #ifndef __GNUC__ #define __FUNCTION__ NULL #endif extern bool quietMessages; typedef enum { W_MESSAGE = 0, W_WARNING, W_FATAL } warning_t; void warnf ( warning_t level, const char *module, const char *file, const char *function, int line, const char *fmt, ... ); //We do not use NDEBUG anymore. Messages are a command line switch. //Warnings, asserts and errors are always important. // #define MESSAGE( fmt, args... ) warnf( W_MESSAGE, __MODULE__, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__, fmt, ## args ) #define MESSAGE( fmt, args... ) do { if ( ! (quietMessages) ) { warnf( W_MESSAGE, __MODULE__, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__, fmt, ## args ); } } while ( 0 ) #define WARNING( fmt, args... ) warnf( W_WARNING, __MODULE__, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__, fmt, ## args ) #define FATAL( fmt, args... ) ( warnf( W_FATAL, __MODULE__, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__, fmt, ## args ), abort() ) #define ASSERT( pred, fmt, args... ) do { if ( ! (pred) ) { warnf( W_FATAL, __MODULE__, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __LINE__, fmt, ## args ); abort(); } } while ( 0 ) #endif