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setjmp.h is a header defined in the C standard library to provide "non-local jumps": control flow that deviates from the usual subroutine call and return sequence. The complementary functions
setjmp
andlongjmp
provide this functionality.A typical use of
setjmp
/longjmp
is implementation of an exception mechanism that utilizes the ability oflongjmp
to reestablish program or thread state, even across multiple levels of function calls. A less common use ofsetjmp
is to create syntax similar to coroutines.Contents
Member functions
int setjmp(jmp_buf env)
Sets up the local jmp_buf
buffer and initializes it for the jump. This routine[1] saves the program's calling environment in the environment buffer specified by theenv
argument for later use bylongjmp
. If the return is from a direct invocation,setjmp
returns 0. If the return is from a call tolongjmp
,setjmp
returns a nonzero value.void longjmp(jmp_buf env, int value)
Restores the context of the environment buffer env
that was saved by invocation of thesetjmp
routine[1] in the same invocation of the program. Invoking longjmp from a nested signal handler is undefined. The value specified byvalue
is passed fromlongjmp
tosetjmp
. Afterlongjmp
is completed, program execution continues as if the corresponding invocation ofsetjmp
had just returned. If thevalue
passed tolongjmp
is 0,setjmp
will behave as if it had returned 1; otherwise, it will behave as if it had returnedvalue
.setjmp
saves the current environment (i.e., the program state) at some point of program execution, into a platform-specific data structure (jmp_buf
) which can be used, at some later point of program execution, bylongjmp
to restore the program state to that which was saved bysetjmp
intojmp_buf
. This process can be imagined to be a "jump" back to the point of program execution wheresetjmp
saved the environment. The (apparent) return value fromsetjmp
indicates whether control reached that point normally or from a call tolongjmp
. This leads to a common idiom:if( setjmp(x) ){/* handle longjmp(x) */}
.POSIX.1 does not specify whether
setjmp
andlongjmp
save or restore the current set of blocked signals — if a program employs signal handling it should use POSIX'ssigsetjmp
/siglongjmp
.Member types
jmp_buf
An array type, such as struct __jmp_buf_tag[1]
[2], suitable for holding the information needed to restore a calling environment.The C99 Rationale describes
jmp_buf
as being an array type for backwards compatibility; existing code refers tojmp_buf
storage locations by name (without the&
address-of operator), which is only possible for array types.[3]Caveats and limitations
When a "non-local goto" is executed via
setjmp
/longjmp
, normal "stack unwinding" does not occur and therefore, any required cleanup actions such as closing file descriptors, flushing buffers, freeing heap-allocated memory, etc., do not occur.If the function in which
setjmp
was called returns, it is no longer possible to safely uselongjmp
with the correspondingjmp_buf
object. This is because the stack frame is invalidated when the function returns. Callinglongjmp
restores the stack pointer, which—because the function returned—would point to a non-existent and potentially overwritten/corrupted stack frame.[4][5]Similarly, C99 does not require that
longjmp
preserve the current stack frame. This means that jumping into a function which was exited via a call tolongjmp
is undefined.[6] However, most implementations oflongjmp
leave the stack frame intact, allowingsetjmp
andlongjmp
to be used to jump back-and-forth between two or more functions—a feature exploited for multitasking.Compared to mechanisms in higher-level programming languages such as Python, Java, C++, C#, and even pre-C languages such as Algol 60, the technique of using
setjmp
/longjmp
to implement an exception mechanism is uninspiring.[citation needed] These languages provide more powerful exception handling techniques, while languages such as Scheme, Smalltalk, and Haskell provide even more general continuation-handling constructs.Example usage
Simple example
This example shows the basic idea of setjmp. Main calls first, which in turn calls second. The "second" function jumps back into main, skipping "first"'s print statement.
#include <stdio.h> #include <setjmp.h> static jmp_buf buf; void second(void) { printf("second\n"); // prints longjmp(buf,1); // jumps back to where setjmp was called - making setjmp now return 1 } void first(void) { second(); printf("first\n"); // does not print } int main() { if ( ! setjmp(buf) ) { first(); // when executed, setjmp returns 0 } else { // when longjmp jumps back, setjmp returns 1 printf("main\n"); // prints } return 0; }
When executed, the above program will output:
second main
Notice that although the
first()
subroutine gets called, "first
" never is printed. "main
" gets printed as the conditional statementif ( ! setjmp(buf) )
is executed a second time.Exception handling
In this example,
setjmp
is used to bracket exception handling, liketry
in some other languages. The call tolongjmp
is analogous to athrow
statement, allowing an exception to return an error status directly to thesetjmp
. The following code adheres to the 1999 ISO C standard and Single UNIX Specification by invokingsetjmp
in a limited range of contexts:[7]- As the condition to an
if
,switch
or iteration statement - As above in conjunction with a single
!
or comparison with an integer constant - As a statement (with the return value unused)
Following these rules can make it easier for the implementation to create the environment buffer, which can be a sensitive operation.[3] More general use of
setjmp
can cause undefined behaviour, such as corruption of local variables; conforming compilers and environments are not required to protect or even warn against such usage. However, slightly more sophisticated idioms such asswitch ((exception_type = setjmp(env))) { }
are common in literature and practice, and remain relatively portable. A simple conforming methodology is presented below, where an additional variable is maintained along with the state buffer. This variable could be elaborated into a structure incorporating the buffer itself.#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #include <setjmp.h> void first(void); void second(void); /* This program's output is: calling first calling second entering second second failed with type 3 exception; remapping to type 1. first failed, exception type 1 */ /* Use a file scoped static variable for the exception stack so we can access * it anywhere within this translation unit. */ static jmp_buf exception_env; static int exception_type; int main() { void *volatile mem_buffer; mem_buffer = NULL; if (setjmp(exception_env)) { /* if we get here there was an exception */ printf("first failed, exception type %d\n", exception_type); } else { /* Run code that may signal failure via longjmp. */ printf("calling first\n"); first(); mem_buffer = malloc(300); /* allocate a resource */ printf(strcpy((char*) mem_buffer, "first succeeded!")); /* ... this will not happen */ } if (mem_buffer) free((void*) mem_buffer); /* carefully deallocate resource */ return 0; } void first(void) { jmp_buf my_env; printf("calling second\n"); memcpy(my_env, exception_env, sizeof(jmp_buf)); switch (setjmp(exception_env)) { case 3: /* if we get here there was an exception. */ printf("second failed with type 3 exception; remapping to type 1.\n"); exception_type = 1; default: /* fall through */ memcpy(exception_env, my_env, sizeof(jmp_buf)); /* restore exception stack */ longjmp(exception_env, exception_type); /* continue handling the exception */ case 0: /* normal, desired operation */ second(); printf("second succeeded\n"); /* not reached */ } memcpy(exception_env, my_env, sizeof(jmp_buf)); /* restore exception stack */ } void second(void) { printf("entering second\n" ); /* reached */ exception_type = 3; longjmp(exception_env, exception_type); /* declare that the program has failed */ printf("leaving second\n"); /* not reached */ }
Cooperative multitasking
C99 provides that
longjmp
is guaranteed to work only when the destination is a calling function, i.e., that the destination scope is guaranteed to be intact. Jumping to a function that has already terminated byreturn
orlongjmp
is undefined.[6] However, most implementations oflongjmp
do not specifically destroy local variables when performing the jump. Since the context survives until its local variables are erased, it could actually be restored bysetjmp
. In many environments (such as Really Simple Threads and TinyTimbers), idioms such asif(!setjmp(child_env)) longjmp(caller_env);
can allow a called function to effectively pause-and-resume at asetjmp
.This is exploited by thread libraries to provide cooperative multitasking facilities without using
setcontext
or other fiber facilities. Whereassetcontext
is a library service which can create an execution context in heap-allocated memory and can support other services such as buffer overflow protection[citation needed], abuse ofsetjmp
is implemented by the programmer, who may reserve memory on the stack and fail to notify the library or operating system of the new operating context. On the other hand, a library's implementation ofsetcontext
may internally usesetjmp
in a fashion similar to this example to save and restore a context, after it has been initialised somehow.Considering that
setjmp
to a child function will generally work unless sabotaged, andsetcontext
, as part of POSIX, is not required to be provided by C implementations, this mechanism may be portable where thesetcontext
alternative fails.Since no exception will be generated upon overflow of one of the multiple stacks in such a mechanism, it is essential to overestimate the space required for each context, including the one containing
main()
and including space for any signal handlers that might interrupt regular execution. Exceeding the allocated space will corrupt the other contexts, usually with the outermost functions first. Unfortunately, systems requiring this kind of programming strategy are often also small ones with limited resources.#include <setjmp.h> #include <stdio.h> jmp_buf mainTask, childTask; void call_with_cushion(void); void child(void); int main(void) { if (!setjmp(mainTask)) { call_with_cushion(); /* child never returns */ /* yield */ } /* execution resumes after this "}" after first time that child yields */ for (;;) { printf("Parent\n"); if (!setjmp(mainTask)) { longjmp(childTask, 1); /* yield - note that this is undefined under C99 */ } } } void call_with_cushion (void) { char space[1000]; /* Reserve enough space for main to run */ space[999] = 1; /* Do not optimize array out of existence */ child(); } void child (void) { for (;;) { printf("Child loop begin\n"); if (!setjmp(childTask)) longjmp(mainTask, 1); /* yield - invalidates childTask in C99 */ printf("Child loop end\n"); if (!setjmp(childTask)) longjmp(mainTask, 1); /* yield - invalidates childTask in C99 */ } /* Don't return. Instead we should set a flag to indicate that main() should stop yielding to us and then longjmp(mainTask, 1) */ }
See also
References
- ^ a b ISO C states that
setjmp
must be implemented as a macro, but POSIX explicitly states that it is undefined whethersetjmp
is a macro or a function. - ^ This is the type used by the GNU C Library, version 2.7
- ^ a b C99 Rationale, version 5.10, April 2003, section 7.13
- ^ CS360 Lecture Notes — Setjmp and Longjmp
- ^ setjmp(3)
- ^ a b ISO/IEC 9899:1999, 2005, 7.13.2.1:2 and footnote 211
- ^ : set jump point for a non-local goto – System Interfaces Reference, The Single UNIX® Specification, Issue 7 from The Open Group
External links
- Linux Library Functions Manual : save stack context for non-local goto –
- Exceptions in C with Longjmp and Setjmp
Categories:- C standard library headers
- Control flow
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