std::terminate
Defined in header <exception>
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void terminate(); |
(until C++11) | |
[[noreturn]] void terminate() noexcept; |
(since C++11) | |
std::terminate()
is called by the C++ runtime when the program cannot continue for any of the following reasons:
5) A dynamic exception specification is violated and the default handler for std::unexpected is executed.
6) A non-default handler for std::unexpected throws an exception that violates the previously violated dynamic exception specification, if the specification does not include std::bad_exception.
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(until C++17) |
7) A noexcept specification is violated (it is implementation-defined whether any stack unwinding is done in this case).
8) std::nested_exception::rethrow_nested is called for an object that isn't holding a captured exception.
9) An exception is thrown from the initial function of std::thread.
10) A joinable std::thread is destroyed or assigned to.
11) std::condition_variable::wait, std::condition_variable::wait_until, or std::condition_variable::wait_for fails to reach its postcondition (e.g. if relocking the mutex throws).
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(since C++11) |
12) A function invoked by a parallel algorithm exits via an uncaught exception and the execution policy specifies termination.
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(since C++17) |
std::terminate()
may also be called directly from the program.
When std::terminate
is called due to a thrown exception, an implicit try/catch handler is considered active. Thus, calling std::current_exception will return the thrown exception.
In any case, std::terminate
calls the currently installed std::terminate_handler. The default std::terminate_handler calls std::abort.
If a destructor reset the terminate handler during stack unwinding and the unwinding later led to |
(until C++11) |
If a destructor reset the terminate handler during stack unwinding, it is unspecified which handler is called if the unwinding later led to |
(since C++11) |
Notes
If the handler mechanism is not wanted, e.g. because it requires atomic operations which may bloat binary size, a direct call to std::abort is preferred when terminating the program abnormally.
Some compiler intrinsics, e.g. __builtin_trap
(gcc, clang, and icc) or __debugbreak
(msvc), can be used to terminate the program as fast as possible.
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
---|---|---|---|
LWG 2111 | C++11 | effect of calling std::set_terminate during stack unwinding differs from C++98 and breaks some ABIs |
made unspecified |
See also
the type of the function called by std::terminate (typedef) | |
causes abnormal program termination (without cleaning up) (function) | |
(C++26) |
pauses the running program when called (function) |