condition-case was able to catch C
stack overflow before commit f0a1e9ec. I understand that
recovering from C stack overflow is magical and can be tricky, but
emacs is capable of this thanks to all of your efforts. The only
part missing is re-throwing this as a lisp exception, which should
not be as hard as recovering from C stack overflow.
Here is why this feature can be important. When we open a file,
find-file-hook will call many functions, including but not limited
to undo-tree. These functions read additional files (undo-tree,
project file, dir-local, etc.) and perform tasks. To guard against
file corruption and other problems, all reads are wrapped in some
try-catch clause. However, the trust in these try-catch clauses
are let down, and a single file corruption (or a file that can
cause C stack overflow) ruins the whole process of loading file
with a mysterious message of"Recovered from C stack overflow". I
don't think this is acceptable.
From a lisp programmer's perspective, if exceptions should occur,
they should be caught. This is exactly the behavior that
condition-case and other try-catch clause promise.
I am not an expert in C, debugging the C part of emacs can be
painful for me. Therefore I bisected and found the offending
commits (see my original bug report). Hope this can help you pin
point the problem and fix the bug.
On 07/11/2018 02:48 PM, Noam Postavsky wrote:
retitle 31995 Condition-case can't catch C stack overflow
tags 31995 + wontfix
quit
Sheng Yang (杨圣) <yangsheng6810@gmail.com> writes:
It seems that the function call ~(read (current-buffer))~ causes C stack
overflow. Though I personally believe the undo-tree file is not
corrupted, I assume this error should be caught by condition-case even
if the file to read is indeed corrupted.
The file is not corrupted, it's just that the recursion goes too deep
during reading. However, I don't think condition-case can reasonably
catch C stack overflow. As it is, recovering from C stack overflow at
all is a bit controversial, which is why we have the
attempt-stack-overflow-recovery variable which you can set to nil in
order to reliably segfault instead.
--
Sheng Yang(杨圣)
PhD student
Computer Science Department
University of Maryland, College Park
E-mail:yangsheng6810@gmail.com