Scroll to navigation

std::rethrow_exception(3) C++ Standard Libary std::rethrow_exception(3)

NAME

std::rethrow_exception - std::rethrow_exception

Synopsis


Defined in header <exception>
[[noreturn]] void rethrow_exception( std::exception_ptr p ); (since C++11)


Throws the previously captured exception object referred-to by the exception pointer
p, or a copy of that object.


It is unspecified whether a copy is made. If a copy is made, the storage for it is
allocated in an unspecified way.


The behavior is undefined if p is null.

Parameters


p - non-null std::exception_ptr

Return value


(none)

Exceptions


The exception object referred-to by p if no copy is made.


Otherwise, a copy of such exception object if the implementation successfully copied
the exception object.


Otherwise, std::bad_alloc or the exception thrown when copying the exception object,
if allocation or copying fails, respectively.

Notes


Before P1675R2, rethrow_exception was not allowed to copy the exception object,
which is unimplementable on some platforms where exception objects are allocated on
the stack.

Example

// Run this code


#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <exception>
#include <stdexcept>


void handle_eptr(std::exception_ptr eptr) // passing by value is ok
{
try {
if (eptr) {
std::rethrow_exception(eptr);
}
} catch(const std::exception& e) {
std::cout << "Caught exception \"" << e.what() << "\"\n";
}
}


int main()
{
std::exception_ptr eptr;
try {
std::string().at(1); // this generates an std::out_of_range
} catch(...) {
eptr = std::current_exception(); // capture
}
handle_eptr(eptr);
} // destructor for std::out_of_range called here, when the eptr is destructed

Possible output:


Caught exception "basic_string::at"

See also


exception_ptr shared pointer type for handling exception objects
(C++11) (typedef)
current_exception captures the current exception in a std::exception_ptr
(C++11) (function)

2022.07.31 http://cppreference.com