I know it doesn’t make sense to actually handle an exception thrown in a different thread, but is there some way I can get notified that at least an exception occurred? E.g. something like
#include <QtConcurrentRun>
#include <iostream>
#include <stdexcept>
void MyFunction()
{
// std::cout << "MyFunction()" << std::endl;
throw std::runtime_error("Test exception.");
}
int main()
{
try
{
QtConcurrent::run(MyFunction);
}
catch(...)
{
std::cout << "Exception caught!" << std::endl;
}
}
exits quietly, even though an exception occurred. This is sometimes very confusing when the exception comes from deep down in the call stack somewhere.
————EDIT————-
I tried to write a wrapper like UmNyobe suggested, but I must be doing something wrong with the function pointers?
#include <QtConcurrentRun>
#include <QFutureWatcher>
#include <QObject>
#include <iostream>
#include <stdexcept>
void MyFunction()
{
// std::cout << "MyFunction()" << std::endl;
throw std::runtime_error("Test exception.");
}
template<typename TFirstParam, typename... TParams>
bool ExceptionWrapper(TFirstParam firstParam, TParams&& ...params)
{
// Here 'firstParam' should be a function pointer, and 'params' are the arguments
// that should be passed to the function
try
{
firstParam(params...);
}
catch(...)
{
std::cout << "Exception caught!" << std::endl;
return false; // failure
}
return true; // success
}
struct MyClass : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
MyClass()
{
connect(&this->FutureWatcher, SIGNAL(finished()), this, SLOT(slot_finished()));
}
void DoSomething()
{
void (*myFunctionPointer)() = MyFunction;
bool (*functionPointer)(decltype(myFunctionPointer)) = ExceptionWrapper;
QFuture<bool> future = QtConcurrent::run(functionPointer);
this->FutureWatcher.setFuture(future);
}
QFutureWatcher<void> FutureWatcher;
void slot_finished()
{
std::cout << "Finished" << std::endl;
if(!this->FutureWatcher.result())
{
std::cout << "There was an error!" << std::endl;
}
}
};
#include "ExceptionWrapper.moc"
int main()
{
MyClass myClass = new MyClass;
myClass->DoSomething();
}
The error I get is on this line:
QFuture<bool> future = QtConcurrent::run(functionPointer);
error: no matching function for call to 'run(bool (*&)(void (*)()))'
You can handle it by using the future returned from
QtConcurrent::run. See this page for details. When you collect on the future, any unhandled exceptions will be rethrown. You can make a simple wrapper class to capture an exception and examine it in the receiving thread.