Basically, how to catch exceptions on mac/linux? That is, exceptions, that are not intrinsic to the language, like segfaults & integer division. Compiling on MSVC, __try __except is perfect because the stack handling allows to catch exceptions and continue execution lower down the stack.
Now, i would like to extend my program to other platforms (mainly the ones mentioned), but i have no idea how exception handling works on these platforms work. As far as i understand, it's handled through posix signals? And as of such, wont allow to handle exception and continue lower down the stack?
Edit: Would this be valid (pseudo code)? As i see it, i leave C++ blocks correctly and thus dont indulge myself in UB.
jmp_buf buffer;
template< typename func >
protected_code(func f) {
if(!setjmp(buffer) {
f();
}
else
{
throw std::exception("exception happened in f()"):
}
}
void sig_handler() {
longjmp(buffer);
}
int main() {
sigaction(sig_handler);
try {
protected_code( [&]
{
1/0;
}
);
}
catch(const std::exception & e) {
...
}
}
Edit 2: Wow for some reason i never thought of just throwing a C++ exception from the signal handler, no need to use longjmp/setjmp then. It of course relies on the fact that the thread calling the signal handler is the same stack and thread that faulted. Is this defined/guaranteed somewhere? Code example:
void sig_handler(int arg) {
throw 4;
}
int main() {
signal(SIGFPE, sig_handler);
try {
int zero = 1;
zero--;
int ret = 1/zero;
} catch(int x) {
printf("catched %d\n", x);
}
return 0;
}