On Fri, 7 Feb 2020 at 14:24, Joshua N Pritikin <jpriti...@pobox.com> wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 06, 2020 at 08:40:02PM -0600, Dirk Eddelbuettel wrote: > > On 6 February 2020 at 20:47, Joshua N Pritikin wrote: > > | The Rcpp::exception constructor does, > > | > > | rcpp_set_stack_trace(Shield<SEXP>(stack_trace())) > > | > > | This can corrupt R if called within an OpenMP block. > > > > ... here. In general, we can _never_ call back into R for anything, > > exceptions or other things. > > > > The RcppParallel package documentation is quite good and clear about > > this; it even has extra data types RMatrix and RVector to stay away > > from R's memory (which Rcpp is close to for performance and zero > > copy reasons). The Writing R Extensions manual also as a little, but > > maybe less clearly. In short, there is simply "so much going with > > R" that it stands little chance of every being threadsafe. > > > > Which means that your OpenMP (or pthreads or TBB or ..) code has to > > stay away from R. > > Yeah, so I replaced Rcpp::stop with, > > template <typename... Args> > inline void NORET mxThrow(const char* fmt, Args&&... args) { > throw std::runtime_error( tfm::format(fmt, std::forward<Args>(args)... > ).c_str() ); > } > > And now things work great. But why does Rcpp::stop need to get the > stack_trace? R's stack trace isn't going to change until the control > flow returns back to R. So why can't you just set a flag to indicate > that "some C++ exception happened" and grab the stack_trace > immediately before returning control to R?
Isn't Rcpp::stop's entire purpose to return control to R immediately? Iñaki _______________________________________________ Rcpp-devel mailing list Rcpp-devel@lists.r-forge.r-project.org https://lists.r-forge.r-project.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rcpp-devel