8198249: Remove deprecated Runtime::runFinalizersOnExit and System::runFinalizersOnExit
Reviewed-by: dholmes, alanb, smarks
/*
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* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
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* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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#include "precompiled.hpp"
#include "utilities/debug.hpp"
#include <new>
//--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Non-product code
#ifndef PRODUCT
// The global operator new should never be called since it will usually indicate
// a memory leak. Use CHeapObj as the base class of such objects to make it explicit
// that they're allocated on the C heap.
// Commented out in product version to avoid conflicts with third-party C++ native code.
//
// In C++98/03 the throwing new operators are defined with the following signature:
//
// void* operator new(std::size_tsize) throw(std::bad_alloc);
// void* operator new[](std::size_tsize) throw(std::bad_alloc);
//
// while all the other (non-throwing) new and delete operators are defined with an empty
// throw clause (i.e. "operator delete(void* p) throw()") which means that they do not
// throw any exceptions (see section 18.4 of the C++ standard).
//
// In the new C++11/14 standard, the signature of the throwing new operators was changed
// by completely omitting the throw clause (which effectively means they could throw any
// exception) while all the other new/delete operators where changed to have a 'nothrow'
// clause instead of an empty throw clause.
//
// Unfortunately, the support for exception specifications among C++ compilers is still
// very fragile. While some more strict compilers like AIX xlC or HP aCC reject to
// override the default throwing new operator with a user operator with an empty throw()
// clause, the MS Visual C++ compiler warns for every non-empty throw clause like
// throw(std::bad_alloc) that it will ignore the exception specification. The following
// operator definitions have been checked to correctly work with all currently supported
// compilers and they should be upwards compatible with C++11/14. Therefore
// PLEASE BE CAREFUL if you change the signature of the following operators!
static void * zero = (void *) 0;
void* operator new(size_t size) /* throw(std::bad_alloc) */ {
fatal("Should not call global operator new");
return zero;
}
void* operator new [](size_t size) /* throw(std::bad_alloc) */ {
fatal("Should not call global operator new[]");
return zero;
}
void* operator new(size_t size, const std::nothrow_t& nothrow_constant) throw() {
fatal("Should not call global operator new");
return 0;
}
void* operator new [](size_t size, std::nothrow_t& nothrow_constant) throw() {
fatal("Should not call global operator new[]");
return 0;
}
void operator delete(void* p) throw() {
fatal("Should not call global delete");
}
void operator delete [](void* p) throw() {
fatal("Should not call global delete []");
}
#endif // Non-product