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I am writing an MFC application that doesn't use .NET (CLR support is set to No Common Language Runtime support in the project settings). However, I get an SEHException thrown when I quit the application in Release build. Debug build gives me an assertion error, but the error window disappears in about half a second after it pops up (something I haven't encountered before either) so I don't get a chance to look at it.

So the main question is: how can an application that doesn't have any managed code throw an Interop.SEHException?

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  • Does the exception always occur, or only when you run it from Visual Studio (i.e., when a debugger is attached)?
    – Abel
    Dec 20, 2009 at 22:38
  • It always occurs. When I run it from VS the exception box comes up. When I run it as a stand-alone app, however, a C Runtime Error pops up, but, again, for only a second. Dec 20, 2009 at 22:59
  • The disappearing exc. box is rather odd, do you have some software running that dismisses certain boxes? Is it possible to use deduction: remove all but a bit and add piece by piece until error re-occurs? Possible driver issue (I had somewhat similar behavior once with a corrupted windows driver update)?
    – Abel
    Dec 20, 2009 at 23:40

2 Answers 2

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An application without managed code can throw a SEHException because structured exception handling (SEH) is part of Win32, and predates the CLR. Here's a link from January 1997 giving a crash course (hah!) on Win32 SEH.

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Ah, fixed it. The problem was that I was calling my exiting code (that included a call to PostQuitMessage()) twice from two separate threads. The disappearing box was due to the fact that very soon after the exception was thrown exit(0) was called and the program terminated.

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