longjmp
Defined in header <setjmp.h>
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void longjmp( jmp_buf env, int status ); |
(until C11) | |
_Noreturn void longjmp( jmp_buf env, int status ); |
(since C11) | |
Loads the execution context env
saved by a previous call to setjmp. This function does not return. Control is transferred to the call site of the macro setjmp that set up env
. That setjmp then returns the value, passed as the status
.
If the function that called setjmp has exited (whether by return or by a different longjmp
higher up the stack), the behavior is undefined. In other words, only long jumps up the call stack are allowed.
Jumping across threads (if the function that called |
(since C11) |
If when setjmp was called, a VLA or another variably-modified type variable was in scope and control left that scope, On the way up the stack, void g(int n) { int a[n]; // a may remain allocated h(n); // does not return } void h(int n) { int b[n]; // b may remain allocated longjmp(buf, 2); // might cause a memory leak for h's b and g's a } |
(since C99) |
Parameters
env | - | variable referring to the execution state of the program saved by setjmp |
status | - | the value to return from setjmp. If it is equal to 0, 1 is used instead |
Return value
(none)
Notes
longjmp
is intended for handling unexpected error conditions where the function cannot return meaningfully. This is similar to exception handling in other programming languages.