-/* Fault handler information. MacOSX version.
-Copyright (C) 1993-1999, 2002-2003 Bruno Haible <clisp.org at bruno>
-Copyright (C) 2003 Paolo Bonzini <gnu.org at bonzini>
+// Fault handler information. MacOSX version.
+// Copyright (C) 1993-1999, 2002-2003 Bruno Haible <clisp.org at bruno>
+// Copyright (C) 2003 Paolo Bonzini <gnu.org at bonzini>
-Used under BSD license with permission from Paolo Bonzini and Bruno Haible,
-2005-03-10:
+// Used under BSD license with permission from Paolo Bonzini and Bruno Haible,
+// 2005-03-10:
-http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_name=200503102200.32002.bruno%40clisp.org
+// http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_name=200503102200.32002.bruno%40clisp.org
-Modified for Factor by Slava Pestov */
+// Modified for Factor by Slava Pestov
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <mach/task.h>
#include <pthread.h>
-/* This is not defined in any header, although documented. */
-
-/* http://web.mit.edu/darwin/src/modules/xnu/osfmk/man/exc_server.html says:
- The exc_server function is the MIG generated server handling function
- to handle messages from the kernel relating to the occurrence of an
- exception in a thread. Such messages are delivered to the exception port
- set via thread_set_exception_ports or task_set_exception_ports. When an
- exception occurs in a thread, the thread sends an exception message to its
- exception port, blocking in the kernel waiting for the receipt of a reply.
- The exc_server function performs all necessary argument handling for this
- kernel message and calls catch_exception_raise, catch_exception_raise_state
- or catch_exception_raise_state_identity, which should handle the exception.
- If the called routine returns KERN_SUCCESS, a reply message will be sent,
- allowing the thread to continue from the point of the exception; otherwise,
- no reply message is sent and the called routine must have dealt with the
- exception thread directly. */
+// This is not defined in any header, although documented.
+
+// http://web.mit.edu/darwin/src/modules/xnu/osfmk/man/exc_server.html says:
+// The exc_server function is the MIG generated server handling function
+// to handle messages from the kernel relating to the occurrence of an
+// exception in a thread. Such messages are delivered to the exception port
+// set via thread_set_exception_ports or task_set_exception_ports. When an
+// exception occurs in a thread, the thread sends an exception message to its
+// exception port, blocking in the kernel waiting for the receipt of a reply.
+// The exc_server function performs all necessary argument handling for this
+// kernel message and calls catch_exception_raise, catch_exception_raise_state
+// or catch_exception_raise_state_identity, which should handle the exception.
+// If the called routine returns KERN_SUCCESS, a reply message will be sent,
+// allowing the thread to continue from the point of the exception; otherwise,
+// no reply message is sent and the called routine must have dealt with the
+// exception thread directly.
extern "C" boolean_t exc_server(mach_msg_header_t* request_msg,
mach_msg_header_t* reply_msg);
-/* http://web.mit.edu/darwin/src/modules/xnu/osfmk/man/catch_exception_raise.html
- These functions are defined in this file, and called by exc_server.
- FIXME: What needs to be done when this code is put into a shared library? */
+// http://web.mit.edu/darwin/src/modules/xnu/osfmk/man/catch_exception_raise.html
+// These functions are defined in this file, and called by exc_server.
+// FIXME: What needs to be done when this code is put into a shared library?
extern "C" kern_return_t catch_exception_raise(
mach_port_t exception_port, mach_port_t thread, mach_port_t task,
exception_type_t exception, exception_data_t code,