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leaf/example/capture_eh.cpp
2018-12-04 22:20:55 -08:00

102 lines
3.5 KiB
C++

//Copyright (c) 2018 Emil Dotchevski
//Copyright (c) 2018 Second Spectrum, Inc.
//Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying
//file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt)
//This is a simple program that demonstrates the use of LEAF to transport e-objects between threads,
//when using exception handling to report failures. See capture_result.cpp for the variant that doesn't
//use exception handling.
#include <boost/leaf/all.hpp>
#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <future>
#include <iterator>
#include <iostream>
#include <algorithm>
namespace leaf = boost::leaf;
//Define several e-types.
struct e_thread_id { std::thread::id value; };
struct e_failure_info1 { std::string value; };
struct e_failure_info2 { int value; };
struct e_failure_info3 { long value; };
struct e_failure_info4 { float value; };
//A type that represents a successfully returned result from a task.
struct task_result { };
//An exception type thrown in case of task failure.
struct failure : virtual std::exception { };
//This is a test task which succeeds or fails depending on its argument. In case of success, it returns
//task_result, in case of error it throws failure.
task_result task( bool succeed )
{
if( succeed )
return task_result(); //Simulate successful result.
else
throw leaf::exception(
failure(),
e_thread_id{std::this_thread::get_id()},
e_failure_info1{"info"},
e_failure_info2{42},
e_failure_info4{42} );
}
//Launch the specified number of asynchronous tasks. In case an asynchronous task throws, its e-objects
//(of the type list used to instantiate leaf::capture_exception) are captured and wrapped in a different
//exception, which transports it to the main thread. The original exception is then recovered by leaf::get.
template <class... E>
std::vector<std::future<task_result>> launch_async_tasks( int thread_count )
{
std::vector<std::future<task_result>> fut;
std::generate_n( std::inserter(fut,fut.end()), thread_count, [ ]
{
return std::async( std::launch::async,
leaf::capture_exception<E...>( [ ] //returns a wrapper function for the lambda...
{
return task((rand()%4)!=0); //...which transports the E... objects.
} ) );
} );
return fut;
}
int main()
{
//Launch tasks, transport the specified e-types. For demonstration, note that the task provides
//failure_info4 which we don't care about, and that we say we could use failure_info3, but which the
//task doesn't provide. So, we'll only get failed_thread_id, failure_info1 and failure_info2.
auto fut = launch_async_tasks<e_thread_id, e_failure_info1, e_failure_info2, e_failure_info3>(42);
//Collect results or deal with failures.
for( auto & f : fut )
{
f.wait();
//Storage for e-objects.
leaf::expect<e_thread_id, e_failure_info1, e_failure_info2, e_failure_info3> exp;
try
{
//Instead of calling future::get we pass the future object to leaf::get. In case the future finished with an exception,
//this will rethrow that exception, after dropping any captured e-objects into exp.
task_result r = leaf::get(f);
//Success!
std::cout << "Success!" << std::endl;
}
catch( failure const & e )
{
//Failure! Handle the error, print failure info.
handle_exception( exp, e,
[ ] ( e_failure_info1 const & v1, e_failure_info2 const & v2, e_thread_id const & tid )
{
std::cerr << "Error in thread " << tid.value << "! failure_info1: " << v1.value << ", failure_info2: " << v2.value << std::endl;
} );
}
}
}