How does ruby's rb_raise stop the execution of the c function calling it?
Asked Answered
P

1

7

If you write a ruby method as a function in C that uses rb_raise, the part of the function after the call will not get excecuted and the program will stop and you will think that rb_raise used exit(). But if you rescue the exception in ruby, like:

begin
  method_that_raises_an_exception
rescue
end
puts 'You wil still get here.'

The ruby code will go on, but your function will stop excecuting. How does rb_raise make this happen?

Presentative answered 29/3, 2010 at 3:0 Comment(0)
I
7

Presumably it uses setjmp (before the method is called) and longjmp (in rb_raise).

Irrecoverable answered 29/3, 2010 at 7:54 Comment(0)

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