/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */ /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ /* Implementations of runtime and static assertion macros for C and C++. */ #ifndef mozilla_Assertions_h #define mozilla_Assertions_h #if defined(MOZILLA_INTERNAL_API) && defined(__cplusplus) #define MOZ_DUMP_ASSERTION_STACK #endif #include "mozilla/Attributes.h" #include "mozilla/Compiler.h" #include "mozilla/Likely.h" #include "mozilla/MacroArgs.h" #include "mozilla/StaticAnalysisFunctions.h" #include "mozilla/Types.h" #ifdef MOZ_DUMP_ASSERTION_STACK #include "nsTraceRefcnt.h" #endif #if defined(MOZ_HAS_MOZGLUE) || defined(MOZILLA_INTERNAL_API) /* * The crash reason set by MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE is consumed by the crash reporter * if present. It is declared here (and defined in Assertions.cpp) to make it * available to all code, even libraries that don't link with the crash reporter * directly. */ MOZ_BEGIN_EXTERN_C extern MFBT_DATA const char* gMozCrashReason; MOZ_END_EXTERN_C static inline void AnnotateMozCrashReason(const char* reason) { gMozCrashReason = reason; } # define MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE(...) AnnotateMozCrashReason(__VA_ARGS__) #else # define MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE(...) do { /* nothing */ } while (0) #endif #include #include #include #ifdef WIN32 /* * TerminateProcess and GetCurrentProcess are defined in , which * further depends on . We hardcode these few definitions manually * because those headers clutter the global namespace with a significant * number of undesired macros and symbols. */ # ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { # endif __declspec(dllimport) int __stdcall TerminateProcess(void* hProcess, unsigned int uExitCode); __declspec(dllimport) void* __stdcall GetCurrentProcess(void); # ifdef __cplusplus } # endif #else # include #endif /* * MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT may be used to assert a condition *at compile time* in C. * In C++11, static_assert is provided by the compiler to the same effect. * This can be useful when you make certain assumptions about what must hold for * optimal, or even correct, behavior. For example, you might assert that the * size of a struct is a multiple of the target architecture's word size: * * struct S { ... }; * // C * MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT(sizeof(S) % sizeof(size_t) == 0, * "S should be a multiple of word size for efficiency"); * // C++11 * static_assert(sizeof(S) % sizeof(size_t) == 0, * "S should be a multiple of word size for efficiency"); * * This macro can be used in any location where both an extern declaration and a * typedef could be used. */ #ifndef __cplusplus /* * Some of the definitions below create an otherwise-unused typedef. This * triggers compiler warnings with some versions of gcc, so mark the typedefs * as permissibly-unused to disable the warnings. */ # if defined(__GNUC__) # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_UNUSED_ATTRIBUTE __attribute__((unused)) # else # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_UNUSED_ATTRIBUTE /* nothing */ # endif # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE1(x, y) x##y # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE(x, y) MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE1(x, y) # if defined(__SUNPRO_CC) /* * The Sun Studio C++ compiler is buggy when declaring, inside a function, * another extern'd function with an array argument whose length contains a * sizeof, triggering the error message "sizeof expression not accepted as * size of array parameter". This bug (6688515, not public yet) would hit * defining moz_static_assert as a function, so we always define an extern * array for Sun Studio. * * We include the line number in the symbol name in a best-effort attempt * to avoid conflicts (see below). */ # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT(cond, reason) \ extern char MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE(moz_static_assert, __LINE__)[(cond) ? 1 : -1] # elif defined(__COUNTER__) /* * If there was no preferred alternative, use a compiler-agnostic version. * * Note that the non-__COUNTER__ version has a bug in C++: it can't be used * in both |extern "C"| and normal C++ in the same translation unit. (Alas * |extern "C"| isn't allowed in a function.) The only affected compiler * we really care about is gcc 4.2. For that compiler and others like it, * we include the line number in the function name to do the best we can to * avoid conflicts. These should be rare: a conflict would require use of * MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT on the same line in separate files in the same * translation unit, *and* the uses would have to be in code with * different linkage, *and* the first observed use must be in C++-linkage * code. */ # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT(cond, reason) \ typedef int MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE(moz_static_assert, __COUNTER__)[(cond) ? 1 : -1] MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_UNUSED_ATTRIBUTE # else # define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT(cond, reason) \ extern void MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_GLUE(moz_static_assert, __LINE__)(int arg[(cond) ? 1 : -1]) MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_UNUSED_ATTRIBUTE # endif #define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_IF(cond, expr, reason) MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT(!(cond) || (expr), reason) #else #define MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_IF(cond, expr, reason) static_assert(!(cond) || (expr), reason) #endif #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif /* * Prints |aStr| as an assertion failure (using aFilename and aLine as the * location of the assertion) to the standard debug-output channel. * * Usually you should use MOZ_ASSERT or MOZ_CRASH instead of this method. This * method is primarily for internal use in this header, and only secondarily * for use in implementing release-build assertions. */ static MOZ_COLD MOZ_ALWAYS_INLINE void MOZ_ReportAssertionFailure(const char* aStr, const char* aFilename, int aLine) MOZ_PRETEND_NORETURN_FOR_STATIC_ANALYSIS { fprintf(stderr, "Assertion failure: %s, at %s:%d\n", aStr, aFilename, aLine); #if defined (MOZ_DUMP_ASSERTION_STACK) nsTraceRefcnt::WalkTheStack(stderr); #endif fflush(stderr); } static MOZ_COLD MOZ_ALWAYS_INLINE void MOZ_ReportCrash(const char* aStr, const char* aFilename, int aLine) MOZ_PRETEND_NORETURN_FOR_STATIC_ANALYSIS { fprintf(stderr, "Hit MOZ_CRASH(%s) at %s:%d\n", aStr, aFilename, aLine); #if defined(MOZ_DUMP_ASSERTION_STACK) nsTraceRefcnt::WalkTheStack(stderr); #endif fflush(stderr); } /** * MOZ_REALLY_CRASH is used in the implementation of MOZ_CRASH(). You should * call MOZ_CRASH instead. */ #if defined(_MSC_VER) /* * On MSVC use the __debugbreak compiler intrinsic, which produces an inline * (not nested in a system function) breakpoint. This distinctively invokes * Breakpad without requiring system library symbols on all stack-processing * machines, as a nested breakpoint would require. * * We use TerminateProcess with the exit code aborting would generate * because we don't want to invoke atexit handlers, destructors, library * unload handlers, and so on when our process might be in a compromised * state. * * We don't use abort() because it'd cause Windows to annoyingly pop up the * process error dialog multiple times. See bug 345118 and bug 426163. * * We follow TerminateProcess() with a call to MOZ_NoReturn() so that the * compiler doesn't hassle us to provide a return statement after a * MOZ_REALLY_CRASH() call. * * (Technically these are Windows requirements, not MSVC requirements. But * practically you need MSVC for debugging, and we only ship builds created * by MSVC, so doing it this way reduces complexity.) */ __declspec(noreturn) __inline void MOZ_NoReturn() {} # ifdef __cplusplus # define MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(line) \ do { \ ::__debugbreak(); \ *((volatile int*) NULL) = line; \ ::TerminateProcess(::GetCurrentProcess(), 3); \ ::MOZ_NoReturn(); \ } while (0) # else # define MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(line) \ do { \ __debugbreak(); \ *((volatile int*) NULL) = line; \ TerminateProcess(GetCurrentProcess(), 3); \ MOZ_NoReturn(); \ } while (0) # endif #else # ifdef __cplusplus # define MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(line) \ do { \ *((volatile int*) NULL) = line; \ ::abort(); \ } while (0) # else # define MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(line) \ do { \ *((volatile int*) NULL) = line; \ abort(); \ } while (0) # endif #endif /* * MOZ_CRASH([explanation-string]) crashes the program, plain and simple, in a * Breakpad-compatible way, in both debug and release builds. * * MOZ_CRASH is a good solution for "handling" failure cases when you're * unwilling or unable to handle them more cleanly -- for OOM, for likely memory * corruption, and so on. It's also a good solution if you need safe behavior * in release builds as well as debug builds. But if the failure is one that * should be debugged and fixed, MOZ_ASSERT is generally preferable. * * The optional explanation-string, if provided, must be a string literal * explaining why we're crashing. This argument is intended for use with * MOZ_CRASH() calls whose rationale is non-obvious; don't use it if it's * obvious why we're crashing. * * If we're a DEBUG build and we crash at a MOZ_CRASH which provides an * explanation-string, we print the string to stderr. Otherwise, we don't * print anything; this is because we want MOZ_CRASH to be 100% safe in release * builds, and it's hard to print to stderr safely when memory might have been * corrupted. */ #ifndef DEBUG # define MOZ_CRASH(...) \ do { \ MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE("MOZ_CRASH(" __VA_ARGS__ ")"); \ MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(__LINE__); \ } while (0) #else # define MOZ_CRASH(...) \ do { \ MOZ_ReportCrash("" __VA_ARGS__, __FILE__, __LINE__); \ MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE("MOZ_CRASH(" __VA_ARGS__ ")"); \ MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(__LINE__); \ } while (0) #endif /* * MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL(explanation-string) can be used if the explanation * string cannot be a string literal (but no other processing needs to be done * on it). A regular MOZ_CRASH() is preferred wherever possible, as passing * arbitrary strings from a potentially compromised process is not without risk. * If the string being passed is the result of a printf-style function, * consider using MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF instead. */ #ifndef DEBUG MFBT_API MOZ_COLD MOZ_NORETURN MOZ_NEVER_INLINE void MOZ_CrashOOL(int aLine, const char* aReason); # define MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL(reason) MOZ_CrashOOL(__LINE__, reason) #else MFBT_API MOZ_COLD MOZ_NORETURN MOZ_NEVER_INLINE void MOZ_CrashOOL(const char* aFilename, int aLine, const char* aReason); # define MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL(reason) MOZ_CrashOOL(__FILE__, __LINE__, reason) #endif static const size_t sPrintfMaxArgs = 4; static const size_t sPrintfCrashReasonSize = 1024; #ifndef DEBUG MFBT_API MOZ_COLD MOZ_NORETURN MOZ_NEVER_INLINE MOZ_FORMAT_PRINTF(2, 3) void MOZ_CrashPrintf(int aLine, const char* aFormat, ...); # define MOZ_CALL_CRASH_PRINTF(format, ...) \ MOZ_CrashPrintf(__LINE__, format, __VA_ARGS__) #else MFBT_API MOZ_COLD MOZ_NORETURN MOZ_NEVER_INLINE MOZ_FORMAT_PRINTF(3, 4) void MOZ_CrashPrintf(const char* aFilename, int aLine, const char* aFormat, ...); # define MOZ_CALL_CRASH_PRINTF(format, ...) \ MOZ_CrashPrintf(__FILE__, __LINE__, format, __VA_ARGS__) #endif /* * MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF(format, arg1 [, args]) can be used when more * information is desired than a string literal can supply. The caller provides * a printf-style format string, which must be a string literal and between * 1 and 4 additional arguments. A regular MOZ_CRASH() is preferred wherever * possible, as passing arbitrary strings to printf from a potentially * compromised process is not without risk. */ #define MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF(format, ...) \ do { \ MOZ_STATIC_ASSERT_VALID_ARG_COUNT(__VA_ARGS__); \ static_assert( \ MOZ_PASTE_PREFIX_AND_ARG_COUNT(, __VA_ARGS__) <= sPrintfMaxArgs, \ "Only up to 4 additional arguments are allowed!"); \ static_assert(sizeof(format) <= sPrintfCrashReasonSize, \ "The supplied format string is too long!"); \ MOZ_CALL_CRASH_PRINTF("" format, __VA_ARGS__); \ } while (0) #ifdef __cplusplus } /* extern "C" */ #endif /* * MOZ_ASSERT(expr [, explanation-string]) asserts that |expr| must be truthy in * debug builds. If it is, execution continues. Otherwise, an error message * including the expression and the explanation-string (if provided) is printed, * an attempt is made to invoke any existing debugger, and execution halts. * MOZ_ASSERT is fatal: no recovery is possible. Do not assert a condition * which can correctly be falsy. * * The optional explanation-string, if provided, must be a string literal * explaining the assertion. It is intended for use with assertions whose * correctness or rationale is non-obvious, and for assertions where the "real" * condition being tested is best described prosaically. Don't provide an * explanation if it's not actually helpful. * * // No explanation needed: pointer arguments often must not be NULL. * MOZ_ASSERT(arg); * * // An explanation can be helpful to explain exactly how we know an * // assertion is valid. * MOZ_ASSERT(state == WAITING_FOR_RESPONSE, * "given that and , we must have..."); * * // Or it might disambiguate multiple identical (save for their location) * // assertions of the same expression. * MOZ_ASSERT(getSlot(PRIMITIVE_THIS_SLOT).isUndefined(), * "we already set [[PrimitiveThis]] for this Boolean object"); * MOZ_ASSERT(getSlot(PRIMITIVE_THIS_SLOT).isUndefined(), * "we already set [[PrimitiveThis]] for this String object"); * * MOZ_ASSERT has no effect in non-debug builds. It is designed to catch bugs * *only* during debugging, not "in the field". If you want the latter, use * MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT, which applies to non-debug builds as well. * * MOZ_DIAGNOSTIC_ASSERT works like MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT in Nightly/Aurora and * MOZ_ASSERT in Beta/Release - use this when a condition is potentially rare * enough to require real user testing to hit, but is not security-sensitive. * This can cause user pain, so use it sparingly. If a MOZ_DIAGNOSTIC_ASSERT * is firing, it should promptly be converted to a MOZ_ASSERT while the failure * is being investigated, rather than letting users suffer. */ /* * Implement MOZ_VALIDATE_ASSERT_CONDITION_TYPE, which is used to guard against * accidentally passing something unintended in lieu of an assertion condition. */ #ifdef __cplusplus # include "mozilla/TypeTraits.h" namespace mozilla { namespace detail { template struct AssertionConditionType { typedef typename RemoveReference::Type ValueT; static_assert(!IsArray::value, "Expected boolean assertion condition, got an array or a " "string!"); static_assert(!IsFunction::value, "Expected boolean assertion condition, got a function! Did " "you intend to call that function?"); static_assert(!IsFloatingPoint::value, "It's often a bad idea to assert that a floating-point number " "is nonzero, because such assertions tend to intermittently " "fail. Shouldn't your code gracefully handle this case instead " "of asserting? Anyway, if you really want to do that, write an " "explicit boolean condition, like !!x or x!=0."); static const bool isValid = true; }; } // namespace detail } // namespace mozilla # define MOZ_VALIDATE_ASSERT_CONDITION_TYPE(x) \ static_assert(mozilla::detail::AssertionConditionType::isValid, \ "invalid assertion condition") #else # define MOZ_VALIDATE_ASSERT_CONDITION_TYPE(x) #endif /* First the single-argument form. */ #define MOZ_ASSERT_HELPER1(expr) \ do { \ MOZ_VALIDATE_ASSERT_CONDITION_TYPE(expr); \ if (MOZ_UNLIKELY(!MOZ_CHECK_ASSERT_ASSIGNMENT(expr))) { \ MOZ_ReportAssertionFailure(#expr, __FILE__, __LINE__); \ MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE("MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(" #expr ")"); \ MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(__LINE__); \ } \ } while (0) /* Now the two-argument form. */ #define MOZ_ASSERT_HELPER2(expr, explain) \ do { \ MOZ_VALIDATE_ASSERT_CONDITION_TYPE(expr); \ if (MOZ_UNLIKELY(!MOZ_CHECK_ASSERT_ASSIGNMENT(expr))) { \ MOZ_ReportAssertionFailure(#expr " (" explain ")", __FILE__, __LINE__); \ MOZ_CRASH_ANNOTATE("MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(" #expr ") (" explain ")"); \ MOZ_REALLY_CRASH(__LINE__); \ } \ } while (0) #define MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT_GLUE(a, b) a b #define MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(...) \ MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT_GLUE( \ MOZ_PASTE_PREFIX_AND_ARG_COUNT(MOZ_ASSERT_HELPER, __VA_ARGS__), \ (__VA_ARGS__)) #ifdef DEBUG # define MOZ_ASSERT(...) MOZ_RELEASE_ASSERT(__VA_ARGS__) #else # define MOZ_ASSERT(...) do { } while (0) #endif /* DEBUG */ #define MOZ_DIAGNOSTIC_ASSERT MOZ_ASSERT /* * MOZ_ASSERT_IF(cond1, cond2) is equivalent to MOZ_ASSERT(cond2) if cond1 is * true. * * MOZ_ASSERT_IF(isPrime(num), num == 2 || isOdd(num)); * * As with MOZ_ASSERT, MOZ_ASSERT_IF has effect only in debug builds. It is * designed to catch bugs during debugging, not "in the field". */ #ifdef DEBUG # define MOZ_ASSERT_IF(cond, expr) \ do { \ if (cond) { \ MOZ_ASSERT(expr); \ } \ } while (0) #else # define MOZ_ASSERT_IF(cond, expr) do { } while (0) #endif /* * MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER() expands to an expression which states that * it is undefined behavior for execution to reach this point. No guarantees * are made about what will happen if this is reached at runtime. Most code * should use MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE because it has extra * asserts. */ #if defined(__clang__) || defined(__GNUC__) # define MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER() __builtin_unreachable() #elif defined(_MSC_VER) # define MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER() __assume(0) #else # ifdef __cplusplus # define MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER() ::abort() # else # define MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER() abort() # endif #endif /* * MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE([reason]) tells the compiler that it * can assume that the macro call cannot be reached during execution. This lets * the compiler generate better-optimized code under some circumstances, at the * expense of the program's behavior being undefined if control reaches the * MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE. * * In Gecko, you probably should not use this macro outside of performance- or * size-critical code, because it's unsafe. If you don't care about code size * or performance, you should probably use MOZ_ASSERT or MOZ_CRASH. * * SpiderMonkey is a different beast, and there it's acceptable to use * MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE more widely. * * Note that MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE is noreturn, so it's valid * not to return a value following a MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE * call. * * Example usage: * * enum ValueType { * VALUE_STRING, * VALUE_INT, * VALUE_FLOAT * }; * * int ptrToInt(ValueType type, void* value) { * { * // We know for sure that type is either INT or FLOAT, and we want this * // code to run as quickly as possible. * switch (type) { * case VALUE_INT: * return *(int*) value; * case VALUE_FLOAT: * return (int) *(float*) value; * default: * MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE("Unexpected ValueType"); * } * } */ /* * Unconditional assert in debug builds for (assumed) unreachable code paths * that have a safe return without crashing in release builds. */ #define MOZ_ASSERT_UNREACHABLE(reason) \ MOZ_ASSERT(false, "MOZ_ASSERT_UNREACHABLE: " reason) #define MOZ_MAKE_COMPILER_ASSUME_IS_UNREACHABLE(reason) \ do { \ MOZ_ASSERT_UNREACHABLE(reason); \ MOZ_ASSUME_UNREACHABLE_MARKER(); \ } while (0) /** * MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT is an annotation to suppress compiler warnings about * switch cases that MOZ_ASSERT(false) (or its alias MOZ_ASSERT_UNREACHABLE) in * debug builds, but intentionally fall through in release builds to handle * unexpected values. * * Why do we need MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT in addition to MOZ_FALLTHROUGH? In * release builds, the MOZ_ASSERT(false) will expand to `do { } while (0)`, * requiring a MOZ_FALLTHROUGH annotation to suppress a -Wimplicit-fallthrough * warning. In debug builds, the MOZ_ASSERT(false) will expand to something like * `if (true) { MOZ_CRASH(); }` and the MOZ_FALLTHROUGH annotation will cause * a -Wunreachable-code warning. The MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT macro breaks this * warning stalemate. * * // Example before MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT: * switch (foo) { * default: * // This case wants to assert in debug builds, fall through in release. * MOZ_ASSERT(false); // -Wimplicit-fallthrough warning in release builds! * [[fallthrough]]; // but -Wunreachable-code warning in debug builds! * case 5: * return 5; * } * * // Example with MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT: * switch (foo) { * default: * // This case asserts in debug builds, falls through in release. * MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT("Unexpected foo value?!"); * case 5: * return 5; * } */ #ifdef DEBUG # define MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT(reason) MOZ_CRASH("MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT: " reason) #else # define MOZ_FALLTHROUGH_ASSERT(...) [[fallthrough]] #endif /* * MOZ_ALWAYS_TRUE(expr) and MOZ_ALWAYS_FALSE(expr) always evaluate the provided * expression, in debug builds and in release builds both. Then, in debug * builds only, the value of the expression is asserted either true or false * using MOZ_ASSERT. */ #ifdef DEBUG # define MOZ_ALWAYS_TRUE(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr)) { \ /* Do nothing. */ \ } else { \ MOZ_ASSERT(false, #expr); \ } \ } while (0) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_FALSE(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr)) { \ MOZ_ASSERT(false, #expr); \ } else { \ /* Do nothing. */ \ } \ } while (0) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_OK(expr) MOZ_ASSERT((expr).isOk()) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_ERR(expr) MOZ_ASSERT((expr).isErr()) #else # define MOZ_ALWAYS_TRUE(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr)) { \ /* Silence [[nodiscard]]. */ \ } \ } while (0) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_FALSE(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr)) { \ /* Silence [[nodiscard]]. */ \ } \ } while (0) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_OK(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr).isOk()) { \ /* Silence [[nodiscard]]. */ \ } \ } while (0) # define MOZ_ALWAYS_ERR(expr) \ do { \ if ((expr).isErr()) { \ /* Silence [[nodiscard]]. */ \ } \ } while (0) #endif #undef MOZ_DUMP_ASSERTION_STACK #undef MOZ_CRASH_CRASHREPORT #endif /* mozilla_Assertions_h */