1

Why do threads behave differently from everything else in ruby? I need to run some code in different threads and not having them vanishing into thin air each time something unexpected happens.

Thread.new do
    begin
        raise "Exception"
    rescue => exc
        print exc
    end
end
# Nothing happens

This code does nothing, for some reason. I tried to use Thread::abort_on_exception = true before that, doesn't change a thing.

So, how do I handle exceptions inside ruby threads correctly?

2
  • 1
    The code you posted works fine for me in IRB. I suspect the issue is that your program is terminating before the new thread finishes executing.
    – Ajedi32
    Jan 15, 2015 at 15:07
  • abort on exception does nothing because it does not raise the exception. if you truly want it to abort_on_exception either don't handle them inside the thread or re raise them after handling. Jan 15, 2015 at 15:20

2 Answers 2

2

You forgot to join() your thread. This code works:

Thread.new do
    begin
        raise "Exception"
    rescue => exc
        print exc
    end
end.join
2
  • Doesn't it mean that I have to wait for that code to finish before continuing? I need to have code running side by side ^^
    – SlySherZ
    Jan 15, 2015 at 15:08
  • Your program finished before thread. Instead of join (which is just "wait for thread") you can put some sleep at the end of the program and you would see that the thread is executed
    – Grych
    Jan 15, 2015 at 15:16
1

As Ajedi32 said, the problem is that the program is finishing before the thread has time to write "Exception".

There are two things to considerate here: Using Thread::abort_on_exception = true makes the program a lot easier to debug and avoids having nasty hidden bugs. The seconds one that I shouldn't be exiting the program without making sure every thread concluded correctly. The code should instead be:

Thread::abort_on_exception = true 
my_thread = Thread.new do
    begin
        raise "Exception"
    rescue => exc
        print exc
    end
end

#Do some parallel stuff
my_thread.join

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