I know that exceptions have a performance penalty, and that it's generally more efficient to try and avoid exceptions than to drop a big try/catch around everything -- but what about the try block itself? What's the cost of merely declaring a try/catch, even if it never throws an exception?
|
1
|
|||
|
|
|
The performance cost of try is very small. The major cost of exception handling is getting the stack trace and other metadata, and that's a cost that's not paid until you actually have to throw an exception. But this will vary by language and implementation. Why not write a simple loop in C# and time it yourself? |
||
|
|
|
Actually, a couple months ago I was creating an ASP.NET web app, and I accidentally wrapped a try / catch block with a very long loop. Even though the loop wasn't generating every exceptions, it was taking too much time to finish. When I went back and saw the try / catch wrapped by the loop, I did it the other way around, I wrapped the loop IN the try / catch block. Performance improved a LOT. You can try this on your own: do something like
And then take out the try / catch block. You'll see a big difference! |
||
|
|
|
|
You might want to read up on Structured Exception Handling. It's Window's implementation of exceptions and used in .NET. |
||
|
|
|
|
A common saying is that exceptions are expensive when they are caught - not thrown. This is because most of the exception metadata gathering (such as getting a stack trace etc.) only really happens on the try-catch side (not on the throw side). Unwinding the stack is actually pretty quick - the CLR walks up the call stack and only pays heed to the finally blocks it finds; at no point in a pure try-finally block does the runtime attempt to 'complete' an exception (it's metadata etc.). From what I remember, any try-catches with filters (such as "catch (FooException) {}") are just as expensive - even if they do not do anything with the exception. I would venture to say that a method (call it CatchesAndRethrows) with the following block:
Might result in a faster stack walk in a method - such as:
Some numbers:
Here is the benchmark I ran (remember, release mode - run without debug):
|
||
|
|
