100

Example

int *ptr;
*ptr = 1000;

can I catch memory access violation exception using standard C++ without using any microsoft specific.

0

9 Answers 9

117

Read it and weep!

I figured it out. If you don't throw from the handler, the handler will just continue and so will the exception.

The magic happens when you throw you own exception and handle that.

#include "stdafx.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <tchar.h>

void SignalHandler(int signal)
{
    printf("Signal %d",signal);
    throw "!Access Violation!";
}

int main()
{
    typedef void (*SignalHandlerPointer)(int);

    SignalHandlerPointer previousHandler;
    previousHandler = signal(SIGSEGV , SignalHandler);
    try{
        *(int *) 0 = 0;// Baaaaaaad thing that should never be caught. You should write good code in the first place.
    }
    catch(char *e)
    {
        printf("Exception Caught: %s\n",e);
    }
    printf("Now we continue, unhindered, like the abomination never happened. (I am an EVIL genius)\n");
    printf("But please kids, DONT TRY THIS AT HOME ;)\n");

}
8
  • Nice tip, especially because __try/__except won't catch AV either. Apr 6, 2011 at 16:32
  • 20
    This does NOT work in gcc but does work in VC++ but only in the "Debug" build. Still upvoting for an interesting solution. The signal handler would be called but the exception won't get thrown. Sep 22, 2013 at 17:05
  • 3
    That does not work portabley. When a signal handler is invoked the stack frame and register munging is not the same as when a normal function stack frame (it may not even use the same stack on some systems). The best you can do is set a flag to indicate the signal handler has been activated. Then in your code test for that flag and throw. Jul 31, 2015 at 15:57
  • 3
    This has a high chance of introducing undefined behavior. In order for this to work on POSIX, there must not be any alternative signal stacks (sigaltstack) installed (unless the C++ exception unwinding implementation allows it), and every runtime function handling the unwinding mechanism itself should be signal-safe.
    – minmaxavg
    Nov 25, 2017 at 16:51
  • 1
    If you want to return default handler to signal (SIGSEGV in this case), juse use the following: signal(SIGSEGV, SIG_DFL);
    – kocica
    Aug 9, 2018 at 12:46
73

There is a very easy way to catch any kind of exception (division by zero, access violation, etc.) in Visual Studio using try -> catch (...) block. A minor project settings tweaking is enough. Just enable /EHa option in the project settings. See Project Properties -> C/C++ -> Code Generation -> Modify the Enable C++ Exceptions to "Yes With SEH Exceptions". That's it!

See details here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cpp/structured-exception-handling-c-cpp?view=msvc-160

3
  • There is no such setting value in Visual Studio .NET 2003, there are only "No" and "Yes (/EHsc)". Can you clarify what minimal version of Visual Studio you need to be able to enable this setting?
    – izogfif
    Jul 28, 2014 at 17:30
  • The link appears to specify "Visual Studio 2005" Jul 29, 2015 at 22:37
  • 2
    what if with gcc or MinGW?
    – user1024
    Aug 14, 2018 at 3:24
47

Nope. C++ does not throw an exception when you do something bad, that would incur a performance hit. Things like access violations or division by zero errors are more like "machine" exceptions, rather than language-level things that you can catch.

6
  • I know it is HW exceptions, but there are microsoft specific keywords handle this(__try __except)?
    – Ahmed
    Jan 19, 2009 at 13:35
  • 2
    @Ahmed: yes, but if you use them, 'impossible' things may happen. For instance, some of the statements after the AV line of code may have already executed, or statements before the AV have not executed.
    – Aaron
    Jan 19, 2009 at 19:55
  • See my answer below how to enable such exceptions handling using regular try...catch block in VC++. Oct 15, 2013 at 19:35
  • @Aaron can you elaborate on the "impossible things happening" part? is it because of compiler and/or CPU reordering instructions?
    – Weipeng
    Jun 25, 2018 at 22:00
  • 1
    @DinoDini SEH definitely slows down execution. But as you indicated its negligible, when the question is "Why are we sigseg-ing". But when shipping the Gold Master, you always turn it off. As its a noticeable difference.
    – Dan
    Oct 19, 2019 at 6:07
14

At least for me, the signal(SIGSEGV ...) approach mentioned in another answer did not work on Win32 with Visual C++ 2015. What did work for me was to use _set_se_translator() found in eh.h. It works like this:

Step 1) Make sure you enable Yes with SEH Exceptions (/EHa) in Project Properties / C++ / Code Generation / Enable C++ Exceptions, as mentioned in the answer by Volodymyr Frytskyy.

Step 2) Call _set_se_translator(), passing in a function pointer (or lambda) for the new exception translator. It is called a translator because it basically just takes the low-level exception and re-throws it as something easier to catch, such as std::exception:

#include <string>
#include <eh.h>

// Be sure to enable "Yes with SEH Exceptions (/EHa)" in C++ / Code Generation;
_set_se_translator([](unsigned int u, EXCEPTION_POINTERS *pExp) {
    std::string error = "SE Exception: ";
    switch (u) {
    case 0xC0000005:
        error += "Access Violation";
        break;
    default:
        char result[11];
        sprintf_s(result, 11, "0x%08X", u);
        error += result;
    };
    throw std::exception(error.c_str());
});

Step 3) Catch the exception like you normally would:

try{
    MakeAnException();
}
catch(std::exception ex){
    HandleIt();
};
1
10

This type of situation is implementation dependent and consequently it will require a vendor specific mechanism in order to trap. With Microsoft this will involve SEH, and *nix will involve a signal

In general though catching an Access Violation exception is a very bad idea. There is almost no way to recover from an AV exception and attempting to do so will just lead to harder to find bugs in your program.

8
  • 1
    So your advice is to know what is the cause of AV exception,is not it?
    – Ahmed
    Jan 19, 2009 at 13:37
  • 4
    Absolutely. AV's are representative of a bug in your code and catching the exception will just hide the problem.
    – JaredPar
    Jan 19, 2009 at 13:59
  • 1
    To clarify, the C++ standard makes a distinction between undefined, unspecified, and implementation defined. Implementation defined means that the implementation must specify what takes place. The code in the question is undefined, which means that anything can happen, and be different each time.
    – KeithB
    Jan 19, 2009 at 14:27
  • 17
    Catching Access Violation is not bad idea - it is good for User experience. However, the only meaningful thing I do in this case is - spawn another process with Bug Reporting GUI and try to create a current process dump. Spawning a process is always succeessful operation. Then, I do TerminateProcess() to self-kill. Sep 11, 2013 at 15:34
  • 13
    It is a bad idea to catch an exception and silently ignore it. It is a very good idea when possible to catch an exception and record information about the state of the application for diagnostic purposes. I once wrote a UI for a backend graphics library that needed some debugging. Every time it crashed, people came to me because they knew I wrote the UI. I put a sig trap around the backend that popped up an alert that told the user that the library crashed. People started going to the author of the library.
    – Kent
    Nov 4, 2014 at 1:32
9

As stated, there is no non Microsoft / compiler vendor way to do this on the windows platform. However, it is obviously useful to catch these types of exceptions in the normal try { } catch (exception ex) { } way for error reporting and more a graceful exit of your app (as JaredPar says, the app is now probably in trouble). We use _se_translator_function in a simple class wrapper that allows us to catch the following exceptions in a a try handler:

DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(datatype_misalignment)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(breakpoint)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(single_step)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(array_bounds_exceeded)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_denormal_operand)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_divide_by_zero)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_inexact_result)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_invalid_operation)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_overflow)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_stack_check)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(flt_underflow)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(int_divide_by_zero)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(int_overflow)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(priv_instruction)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(in_page_error)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(illegal_instruction)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(noncontinuable_exception)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(stack_overflow)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(invalid_disposition)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(guard_page)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(invalid_handle)
DECLARE_EXCEPTION_CLASS(microsoft_cpp)

The original class came from this very useful article:

http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cpp/exception.aspx

1
  • 8
    I see that using a Microsoft compiler is treated the same as an illegal instruction or access violation. Interesting. Jan 19, 2009 at 15:38
3

Not the exception handling mechanism, But you can use the signal() mechanism that is provided by the C.

> man signal

     11    SIGSEGV      create core image    segmentation violation

Writing to a NULL pointer is probably going to cause a SIGSEGV signal

1
  • @maidamai signal() is part of the posix standard. Windows implements the posix standard (as does Linux and unix) Jul 23, 2019 at 7:45
0

Yes, all things are possible. Catching CPU exceptions (interrupts) (async exceptions) are possible. I have an example that catches NPE/AV, DivByZero, FPE, Stack Overflow. Tested with Windows and Linux. Unfortunately it does require some specific Windows API on Windows. The signal() function on Windows does not catch all hardware exceptions, and Windows does not support sigaction() yet.

/*

Test : Catching all hardware exceptions.

Windows : cl main.cpp

Linux : gcc -std=c++11 main.cpp -lstdc++ -lm

*/

#include <cstdio>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <setjmp.h>

#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h>
#include <errhandlingapi.h>
#include <malloc.h>
#include <float.h>
#else
#include <signal.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <fenv.h>
#endif

#define count (16)
#define stack (4 * 1024)

extern "C" {

jmp_buf buf;  //NOTE : this should be thread local in a multi-threaded app (and stored in a queue if nested try / catch blocks are used)

#ifdef _WIN32
bool was_stack_overflow = false;  //NOTE : this should be thread local in a multi-threaded app
LONG exception_filter(_EXCEPTION_POINTERS *ExceptionInfo) {
  was_stack_overflow = ExceptionInfo->ExceptionRecord->ExceptionCode == EXCEPTION_STACK_OVERFLOW;
  longjmp(buf, 1);
  return 0;
}
#else
void handler(int sig,siginfo_t *info, void *context) {
  longjmp(buf, 1);
}
#endif

void func1(int z) {
  printf("func1:%d\n", z);
}

void func1f(float z) {
  printf("func1f:%f\n", z);
}

void func2(const char* msg, int z) {
  printf("%s:%d\n", msg, z);
}

void func3() {
  printf("done!\n");
}

int recursive(int val) {
  int data[1024];
  return recursive(val + 1);
}

//after a catch some cleanup is required
void after_catch() {
#ifdef _WIN32
  if (was_stack_overflow) {
    _resetstkoflw();
    //see this website for explaination of _resetstkoflw() https://jeffpar.github.io/kbarchive/kb/315/Q315937/
  }
#else
  //on Linux need to re-enable FPEs after a longjmp()
  feenableexcept(FE_INVALID | FE_DIVBYZERO | FE_OVERFLOW | FE_UNDERFLOW);
#endif
}

}

int main(int argc, const char **argv) {
  int z = 0;
  float fz = 0.0f;
#ifdef _WIN32
  printf("Win32 setup\n");
  SetUnhandledExceptionFilter(exception_filter);
  //enable floating point exceptions
  unsigned int control_word;
  _controlfp_s(&control_word, _MCW_DN, 0xffff);
#else
  printf("Linux setup\n");
  stack_t altstack;
  altstack.ss_sp =  malloc(stack);
  altstack.ss_flags = 0;
  altstack.ss_size = stack;

  sigaltstack(&altstack, NULL);
  //NOTE : sigaltstack with SA_ONSTACK is required to catch stack overflows

  struct sigaction act = { 0 };
  act.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO | SA_NODEFER | SA_ONSTACK;
  act.sa_sigaction = &handler;

  sigaction(SIGSEGV, &act,NULL);
  sigaction(SIGFPE, &act,NULL);
//  sigaction(SIGILL, &act,NULL);
  //enable float point exceptions
  feenableexcept(FE_INVALID | FE_DIVBYZERO | FE_OVERFLOW | FE_UNDERFLOW);
#endif
  int jmp;
  int cntr;

  cntr=0;
  for(int a=0;a<count;a++) {
    jmp = setjmp(buf);
    if (jmp == 0) {
      // try : div by zero
      int x = 123;
      int y = 0;
      z = x / y;
      func1(z);
    } else {
      //catch block
      after_catch();
      cntr++;
    }
  }
  func2("/0", cntr);

  cntr=0;
  for(int a=0;a<count;a++) {
    jmp = setjmp(buf);
    if (jmp == 0) {
      //try : NPE
      int *p = NULL;
      *p = 0;
      func1(z);
    } else {
      //catch block
      after_catch();
      cntr++;
    }
  }
  func2("NPE", cntr);

  cntr=0;
  for(int a=0;a<count;a++) {
    jmp = setjmp(buf);
    if (jmp == 0) {
      //try : FPE
      float fx = 123.0f;
      float fy = 0.0f;
      fz = fx / fy;
      func1f(fz);
    } else {
      //catch block
      after_catch();
      cntr++;
    }
  }
  func2("FPE", cntr);

  cntr=0;
  for(int a=0;a<count;a++) {
    jmp = setjmp(buf);
    if (jmp == 0) {
      //try : stack overflow
      recursive(0);
      func1(z);
    } else {
      //catch block
      after_catch();
      cntr++;
    }
  }
  func2("StackOverflow", cntr);

  func3();

  return 0;
}

C++ Exceptions are "software" exceptions and would not catch these hardware exceptions. There is no "portable" way to achieve this yet. Hopefully the next C++ edition would add support to the standard try / catch but don't hold your breath.

Note : this solution using longjmp() which may cause memory leaks since dtors may not get called. Code inside try blocks should be very small. Was unable to reliably throw a C++ software exception in the handlers.

I think they are called 'async exceptions' because floating point exceptions occur on the floating point unit which runs parallel to the main CPU. An 'fwait' causes the CPU to wait for the FPU to finish processing.

Posting this here since other related questions redirect here.

Thanks,

-1

A violation like that means that there's something seriously wrong with the code, and it's unreliable. I can see that a program might want to try to save the user's data in a way that one hopes won't write over previous data, in the hope that the user's data isn't already corrupted, but there is by definition no standard method of dealing with undefined behavior.

1
  • 8
    Recovering from access violation may be possible. Recovering from EIP jump voilation is never possible unless you are dodgy and keep assembly level instruction pointers. However, catching Access violation is good for spawning another process for bug reporting GUI feature. Sep 11, 2013 at 15:37

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