| 1 | /**************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 4 | ** All rights reserved. | 
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| 5 | ** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) | 
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| 6 | ** | 
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| 7 | ** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit. | 
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| 8 | ** | 
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| 9 | ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ | 
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| 10 | ** Commercial Usage | 
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| 11 | ** Licensees holding valid Qt Commercial licenses may use this file in | 
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| 12 | ** accordance with the Qt Commercial License Agreement provided with the | 
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| 13 | ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in | 
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| 14 | ** a written agreement between you and Nokia. | 
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| 15 | ** | 
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| 16 | ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage | 
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| 17 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser | 
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| 18 | ** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software | 
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| 19 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the | 
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| 20 | ** packaging of this file.  Please review the following information to | 
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| 21 | ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements | 
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| 22 | ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. | 
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| 23 | ** | 
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| 24 | ** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional | 
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| 25 | ** rights.  These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception | 
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| 26 | ** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. | 
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| 27 | ** | 
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| 28 | ** GNU General Public License Usage | 
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| 29 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU | 
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| 30 | ** General Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software | 
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| 31 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the | 
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| 32 | ** packaging of this file.  Please review the following information to | 
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| 33 | ** ensure the GNU General Public License version 3.0 requirements will be | 
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| 34 | ** met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html. | 
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| 35 | ** | 
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| 36 | ** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact | 
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| 37 | ** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. | 
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| 38 | ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ | 
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| 39 | ** | 
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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page exceptionsafety.html | 
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| 44 | \title Exception Safety | 
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| 45 | \ingroup best-practices | 
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| 46 | \brief A guide to exception safety in Qt. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 | \bold {Preliminary warning}: Exception safety is not feature complete! | 
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| 49 | Common cases should work, but classes might still leak or even crash. | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | Qt itself will not throw exceptions. Instead, error codes are used. | 
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| 52 | In addition, some classes have user visible error messages, for example | 
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| 53 | \l QIODevice::errorString() or \l QSqlQuery::lastError(). | 
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| 54 | This has historical and practical reasons - turning on exceptions | 
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| 55 | can increase the library size by over 20%. | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | The following sections describe Qt's behavior if exception support is | 
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| 58 | enabled at compile time. | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 61 |  | 
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| 62 | \section1 Exception safe modules | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | \section2 Containers | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | Qt's \l{container classes} are generally exception neutral. They pass any | 
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| 67 | exception that happens within their contained type \c T to the user | 
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| 68 | while keeping their internal state valid. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | Example: | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | \code | 
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| 73 | QList<QString> list; | 
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| 74 | ... | 
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| 75 | try { | 
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| 76 | list.append("hello"); | 
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| 77 | } catch (...) { | 
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| 78 | } | 
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| 79 | // list is safe to use - the exception did not affect it. | 
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| 80 | \endcode | 
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| 81 |  | 
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| 82 | Exceptions to that rule are containers for types that can throw during assignment | 
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| 83 | or copy constructions. For those types, functions that modify the container as well as | 
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| 84 | returning a value, are unsafe to use: | 
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| 85 |  | 
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| 86 | \code | 
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| 87 | MyType s = list.takeAt(2); | 
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| 88 | \endcode | 
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| 89 |  | 
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| 90 | If an exception occurs during the assignment of \c s, the value at index 2 is already | 
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| 91 | removed from the container, but hasn't been assigned to \c s yet. It is lost | 
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| 92 | without chance of recovery. | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | The correct way to write it: | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 | \code | 
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| 97 | MyType s = list.at(2); | 
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| 98 | list.removeAt(2); | 
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| 99 | \endcode | 
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| 100 |  | 
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| 101 | If the assignment throws, the container still contains the value, no data loss occured. | 
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| 102 |  | 
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| 103 | Note that implicitly shared Qt classes will not throw in their assignment | 
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| 104 | operators or copy constructors, so the limitation above does not apply. | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | \section1 Out of Memory Handling | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | Most desktop operating systems overcommit memory. This means that \c malloc() | 
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| 109 | or \c{operator new} return a valid pointer, even though there is not enough | 
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| 110 | memory available at allocation time. On such systems, no exception of type | 
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| 111 | \c std::bad_alloc is thrown. | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 | On all other operating systems, Qt will throw an exception of type std::bad_alloc | 
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| 114 | if any allocation fails. Allocations can fail if the system runs out of memory or | 
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| 115 | doesn't have enough continuous memory to allocate the requested size. | 
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| 116 |  | 
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| 117 | Exceptions to that rule are documented. As an example, \l QImage::create() | 
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| 118 | returns false if not enough memory exists instead of throwing an exception. | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | \section1 Recovering from exceptions | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | Currently, the only supported use case for recovering from exceptions thrown | 
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| 123 | within Qt (for example due to out of memory) is to exit the event loop and do | 
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| 124 | some cleanup before exiting the application. | 
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| 125 |  | 
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| 126 | Typical use case: | 
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| 127 |  | 
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| 128 | \code | 
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| 129 | QApplication app(argc, argv); | 
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| 130 | ... | 
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| 131 | try { | 
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| 132 | app.exec(); | 
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| 133 | } catch (const std::bad_alloc &) { | 
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| 134 | // clean up here, e.g. save the session | 
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| 135 | // and close all config files. | 
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| 136 |  | 
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| 137 | return 0; // exit the application | 
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| 138 | } | 
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| 139 | \endcode | 
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| 140 |  | 
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| 141 | After an exception is thrown, the connection to the windowing server | 
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| 142 | might already be closed. It is not safe to call a GUI related function | 
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| 143 | after catching an exception. | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | \section1 Platform-Specific Exception Handling | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | \section2 The Symbian platform | 
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| 148 |  | 
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| 149 | The Symbian platform implements its own exception system that differs from the standard | 
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| 150 | C++ mechanism. When using Qt for the Symbian platform, and especially when writing code to | 
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| 151 | access Symbian functionality directly, it may be necessary to know about the underlying | 
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| 152 | implementation and how it interacts with Qt. | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | The \l{Exception Safety with Symbian} document shows how to use the facilities provided | 
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| 155 | by Qt to use exceptions as safely as possible. | 
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| 156 | */ | 
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