Next: Conditionalizing Declarations, Previous: Use of Boolean Constants, Up: Modeling Conditional Compilation in Ada [Contents][Index]
A common use of conditional code is to execute statements (for example dynamic checks, or output of intermediate results) under control of a debug switch, so that the debugging behavior can be turned on and off. This can be done using a Boolean constant to control whether the code is active:
if Debugging then Put_Line ("got to the first stage!"); end if;
or
if Debugging and then Temperature > 999.0 then raise Temperature_Crazy; end if;
Since this is a common case, there are special features to deal with
this in a convenient manner. For the case of tests, Ada 2005 has added
a pragma Assert
that can be used for such tests. This pragma is modeled
on the Assert
pragma that has always been available in GNAT, so this
feature may be used with GNAT even if you are not using Ada 2005 features.
The use of pragma Assert
is described in the
GNAT_Reference_Manual, but as an
example, the last test could be written:
pragma Assert (Temperature <= 999.0, "Temperature Crazy");
or simply
pragma Assert (Temperature <= 999.0);
In both cases, if assertions are active and the temperature is excessive,
the exception Assert_Failure
will be raised, with the given string in
the first case or a string indicating the location of the pragma in the second
case used as the exception message.
You can turn assertions on and off by using the Assertion_Policy
pragma.
This is an Ada 2005 pragma which is implemented in all modes by
GNAT. Alternatively, you can use the -gnata
switch
to enable assertions from the command line, which applies to
all versions of Ada.
For the example above with the Put_Line
, the GNAT-specific pragma
Debug
can be used:
pragma Debug (Put_Line ("got to the first stage!"));
If debug pragmas are enabled, the argument, which must be of the form of
a procedure call, is executed (in this case, Put_Line
will be called).
Only one call can be present, but of course a special debugging procedure
containing any code you like can be included in the program and then
called in a pragma Debug
argument as needed.
One advantage of pragma Debug
over the if Debugging then
construct is that pragma Debug
can appear in declarative contexts,
such as at the very beginning of a procedure, before local declarations have
been elaborated.
Debug pragmas are enabled using either the -gnata
switch that also
controls assertions, or with a separate Debug_Policy pragma.
The latter pragma is new in the Ada 2005 versions of GNAT (but it can be used
in Ada 95 and Ada 83 programs as well), and is analogous to
pragma Assertion_Policy
to control assertions.
Assertion_Policy
and Debug_Policy
are configuration pragmas,
and thus they can appear in gnat.adc
if you are not using a
project file, or in the file designated to contain configuration pragmas
in a project file.
They then apply to all subsequent compilations. In practice the use of
the -gnata
switch is often the most convenient method of controlling
the status of these pragmas.
Note that a pragma is not a statement, so in contexts where a statement
sequence is required, you can’t just write a pragma on its own. You have
to add a null
statement.
if ... then ... -- some statements else pragma Assert (Num_Cases < 10); null; end if;
Next: Conditionalizing Declarations, Previous: Use of Boolean Constants, Up: Modeling Conditional Compilation in Ada [Contents][Index]