Unrecoverable Errors with `panic!`
The Rust Programming Language Foreword Introduction
Unrecoverable Errors with panic!
Sometimes, bad things happen in your code, and there’s nothing you can do about
it. In these cases, Rust has the panic!
macro. When the panic!
macro
executes, your program will print a failure message, unwind and clean up the
stack, and then quit. This most commonly occurs when a bug of some kind has
been detected and it’s not clear to the programmer how to handle the error.
Unwinding the Stack or Aborting in Response to a Panic
By default, when a panic occurs, the program starts unwinding, which means Rust walks back up the stack and cleans up the data from each function it encounters. But this walking back and cleanup is a lot of work. The alternative is to immediately abort, which ends the program without cleaning up. Memory that the program was using will then need to be cleaned up by the operating system. If in your project you need to make the resulting binary as small as possible, you can switch from unwinding to aborting upon a panic by adding
panic = 'abort'
to the appropriate[profile]
sections in your Cargo.toml file. For example, if you want to abort on panic in release mode, add this:[profile.release] panic = 'abort'
Let’s try calling panic!
in a simple program:
<span class="filename">Filename: src/main.rs</span>
fn main() {
panic!("crash and burn");
}
When you run the program, you’ll see something like this:
$ cargo run
Compiling panic v0.1.0 (file:///projects/panic)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.25s
Running `target/debug/panic`
thread 'main' panicked at 'crash and burn', src/main.rs:2:5
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
The call to panic!
causes the error message contained in the last two lines.
The first line shows our panic message and the place in our source code where
the panic occurred: src/main.rs:2:5 indicates that it’s the second line,
fifth character of our src/main.rs file.
In this case, the line indicated is part of our code, and if we go to that
line, we see the panic!
macro call. In other cases, the panic!
call might
be in code that our code calls, and the filename and line number reported by
the error message will be someone else’s code where the panic!
macro is
called, not the line of our code that eventually led to the panic!
call. We
can use the backtrace of the functions the panic!
call came from to figure
out the part of our code that is causing the problem. We’ll discuss what a
backtrace is in more detail next.
Using a panic!
Backtrace
Let’s look at another example to see what it’s like when a panic!
call comes
from a library because of a bug in our code instead of from our code calling
the macro directly. Listing 9-1 has some code that attempts to access an
element by index in a vector.
<span class="filename">Filename: src/main.rs</span>
fn main() {
let v = vec![1, 2, 3];
v[99];
}
<span class="caption">Listing 9-1: Attempting to access an element beyond the
end of a vector, which will cause a call to panic!
</span>
Here, we’re attempting to access the 100th element of our vector (which is at
index 99 because indexing starts at zero), but it has only 3 elements. In this
situation, Rust will panic. Using []
is supposed to return an element, but if
you pass an invalid index, there’s no element that Rust could return here that
would be correct.
Other languages, like C, will attempt to give you exactly what you asked for in this situation, even though it isn’t what you want: you’ll get whatever is at the location in memory that would correspond to that element in the vector, even though the memory doesn’t belong to the vector. This is called a buffer overread and can lead to security vulnerabilities if an attacker is able to manipulate the index in such a way as to read data they shouldn’t be allowed to that is stored after the array.
To protect your program from this sort of vulnerability, if you try to read an element at an index that doesn’t exist, Rust will stop execution and refuse to continue. Let’s try it and see:
$ cargo run
Compiling panic v0.1.0 (file:///projects/panic)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.27s
Running `target/debug/panic`
thread 'main' panicked at 'index out of bounds: the len is 3 but the index is 99', libcore/slice/mod.rs:2448:10
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
This error points at a file we didn’t write, libcore/slice/mod.rs. That’s the
implementation of slice
in the Rust source code. The code that gets run when
we use []
on our vector v
is in libcore/slice/mod.rs, and that is where
the panic!
is actually happening.
The next note line tells us that we can set the RUST_BACKTRACE
environment
variable to get a backtrace of exactly what happened to cause the error. A
backtrace is a list of all the functions that have been called to get to this
point. Backtraces in Rust work as they do in other languages: the key to
reading the backtrace is to start from the top and read until you see files you
wrote. That’s the spot where the problem originated. The lines above the lines
mentioning your files are code that your code called; the lines below are code
that called your code. These lines might include core Rust code, standard
library code, or crates that you’re using. Let’s try getting a backtrace by
setting the RUST_BACKTRACE
environment variable to any value except 0.
Listing 9-2 shows output similar to what you’ll see.
$ RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo run
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.00s
Running `target/debug/panic`
thread 'main' panicked at 'index out of bounds: the len is 3 but the index is 99', libcore/slice/mod.rs:2448:10
stack backtrace:
0: std::sys::unix::backtrace::tracing::imp::unwind_backtrace
at libstd/sys/unix/backtrace/tracing/gcc_s.rs:49
1: std::sys_common::backtrace::print
at libstd/sys_common/backtrace.rs:71
at libstd/sys_common/backtrace.rs:59
2: std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}
at libstd/panicking.rs:211
3: std::panicking::default_hook
at libstd/panicking.rs:227
4: <std::panicking::begin_panic::PanicPayload<A> as core::panic::BoxMeUp>::get
at libstd/panicking.rs:476
5: std::panicking::continue_panic_fmt
at libstd/panicking.rs:390
6: std::panicking::try::do_call
at libstd/panicking.rs:325
7: core::ptr::drop_in_place
at libcore/panicking.rs:77
8: core::ptr::drop_in_place
at libcore/panicking.rs:59
9: <usize as core::slice::SliceIndex<[T]>>::index
at libcore/slice/mod.rs:2448
10: core::slice::<impl core::ops::index::Index<I> for [T]>::index
at libcore/slice/mod.rs:2316
11: <alloc::vec::Vec<T> as core::ops::index::Index<I>>::index
at liballoc/vec.rs:1653
12: panic::main
at src/main.rs:4
13: std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}
at libstd/rt.rs:74
14: std::panicking::try::do_call
at libstd/rt.rs:59
at libstd/panicking.rs:310
15: macho_symbol_search
at libpanic_unwind/lib.rs:102
16: std::alloc::default_alloc_error_hook
at libstd/panicking.rs:289
at libstd/panic.rs:392
at libstd/rt.rs:58
17: std::rt::lang_start
at libstd/rt.rs:74
18: panic::main
<span class="caption">Listing 9-2: The backtrace generated by a call to
panic!
displayed when the environment variable RUST_BACKTRACE
is set</span>
That’s a lot of output! The exact output you see might be different depending
on your operating system and Rust version. In order to get backtraces with this
information, debug symbols must be enabled. Debug symbols are enabled by
default when using cargo build
or cargo run
without the --release
flag,
as we have here.
In the output in Listing 9-2, line 12 of the backtrace points to the line in our project that’s causing the problem: line 4 of src/main.rs. If we don’t want our program to panic, the location pointed to by the first line mentioning a file we wrote is where we should start investigating. In Listing 9-1, where we deliberately wrote code that would panic in order to demonstrate how to use backtraces, the way to fix the panic is to not request an element at index 99 from a vector that only contains 3 items. When your code panics in the future, you’ll need to figure out what action the code is taking with what values to cause the panic and what the code should do instead.
We’ll come back to panic!
and when we should and should not use panic!
to
handle error conditions in the [“To panic!
or Not to panic!
”]
to-panic-or-not-to-panic section later in this chapter. Next,
we’ll look at how to recover from an error using Result
.