In certain cases - especially when an exception escapes a destructor during stack unwinding - C++ runtime calls terminate()
which must do something reasonable post-mortem and then exit the program. When a question "why so harsh" arises the answer is usually "there's nothing more reasonable to do in such error situations". That sounds reasonable if the whole program is in C++.
Now what if the C++ code is in a library and the program that uses the library is not in C++? This happens quite often - for example I might have a native C++ COM component consumed by a .NET program. Once terminate()
is called inside the component code the .NET program suddenly ends abnormally. The program author will first of all think "I don't care of C++, why the hell is this library make my program exit?"
How do I handle the latter scenario when developing libraries in C++? Is it reasonable that terminate()
unexpectedly ends the program? Is there a better way to handle such situations?
terminate()
, or do anything which is defined to callterminate()
? Doesn't the same issue apply toexit()
,abort()
, provoking a SIGKILL, or undefined behavior? If your documentation says a function will return, and it doesn't return, that's a bug. The program author is right to first of all think "why is this library making my program exit", and secondly to hunt you down and demand vengeance.terminate()
- C++ runtime does.