libc/newlib/libc/stdlib/assert.c

75 lines
1.8 KiB
C

/*
FUNCTION
<<assert>>---macro for debugging diagnostics
INDEX
assert
SYNOPSIS
#include <assert.h>
void assert(int <[expression]>);
DESCRIPTION
Use this macro to embed debuggging diagnostic statements in
your programs. The argument <[expression]> should be an
expression which evaluates to true (nonzero) when your program
is working as you intended.
When <[expression]> evaluates to false (zero), <<assert>>
calls <<abort>>, after first printing a message showing what
failed and where:
. Assertion failed: <[expression]>, file <[filename]>, line <[lineno]>, function: <[func]>
If the name of the current function is not known (for example,
when using a C89 compiler that does not understand __func__),
the function location is omitted.
The macro is defined to permit you to turn off all uses of
<<assert>> at compile time by defining <<NDEBUG>> as a
preprocessor variable. If you do this, the <<assert>> macro
expands to
. (void(0))
RETURNS
<<assert>> does not return a value.
PORTABILITY
The <<assert>> macro is required by ANSI, as is the behavior
when <<NDEBUG>> is defined.
Supporting OS subroutines required (only if enabled): <<close>>, <<fstat>>,
<<getpid>>, <<isatty>>, <<kill>>, <<lseek>>, <<read>>, <<sbrk>>, <<write>>.
*/
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#ifndef HAVE_ASSERT_FUNC
/* func can be NULL, in which case no function information is given. */
void
__assert_func (const char *file,
int line,
const char *func,
const char *failedexpr)
{
fiprintf(stderr,
"assertion \"%s\" failed: file \"%s\", line %d%s%s\n",
failedexpr, file, line,
func ? ", function: " : "", func ? func : "");
abort();
/* NOTREACHED */
}
#endif /* HAVE_ASSERT_FUNC */
void
__assert (const char *file,
int line,
const char *failedexpr)
{
__assert_func (file, line, NULL, failedexpr);
/* NOTREACHED */
}