Hi Kevin, I tried the latest master branch ("522e66d9ea04502b4a98bb28642fb4724ff0a479") in R 3.5.1, but the `checkUserInterrupt` still does not throw the exception.
The R is under a docker container (library/r-base:3.5.1), so there should be no GUI. Hope these info helps. Best, Wush On Fri, Jul 27, 2018 at 12:06 AM, Kevin Ushey <kevinus...@gmail.com> wrote: > What environment are you executing this on? (R in terminal, or with a GUI; > which OS?) > > One thing to be cautious of is that many R APIs in graphical environments > will also call for processing of events, and this in turn can also imply a > check for, and handling of, interrupts. Rprintf() is in fact one such API > (and this is called behind the scenes by Rcout). > > This implies something quite unfortunate: attempts to use any R APIs which > call for processing of events within a C++ context can cause a longjmp that > bypass C++ destructors and leave you in a bad state. > > Fortunately, things will be better with the newer Rcpp evaluation system > from R 3.5 and above, thanks for R_UnwindProtect() and work from Lionel to > integrate that with the Rcpp evaluation model. See > https://github.com/RcppCore/Rcpp/pull/789 for some of the details on the > initial PR. We're still settling out some final details on the API but once > that's ready we'll have some documentation + hopefully an Rcpp gallery > example describing its use. > > (We might also consider in Rcpp wrapping our calls to Rprintf() in > R_ToplevelExec() and 'catching' and 'rethrowing' interrupts seen, but this > might have some unintended side-effects) > > Best, > Kevin > > On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 8:18 AM Wush Wu <wush...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I just learned the function `checkUserInterrupt` and played with it in my >> package today. At first, everything was good. However, I sensed something >> wrong when I interrupted my function and relaunched it. In my case, the >> thread number of OpenMP decreased to 1 after an user interruption. >> >> According to the documentation, the `checkUserInterrupt` will throw an >> exception to trigger the C++ destructors on the stack. However, if I use >> `Rcout` several times (verbose mode of my function), then it will not throw >> the exception but leave the function directly. >> >> Here is a toy example to demonstrate: https://gist.github.com/wush97 >> 8/36c4e5d8324dd14040eecb4b1dd1c631 >> >> It uses `Rcout` / `std::cout` as a progressbar and check the user >> interruption. If the exception is thrown correctly, then a catch clause >> will handle the exception and write something to the `std::cerr`. >> >> If I turn off the verbose mode, then the `checkUserInterrupt` always >> throws the exception. >> >> If I turn on the verbose mode and use `jsize` to select the number of dot >> on the screen, then the `checkUserInterrupt` will exit the function >> immediately if `jsize` is large. For example, `checkUserInterrupt` throws >> exception if `jsize = 5` but does not throw if `jsize = 100`. >> >> If I use `std::cout` instead of `Rcpp::Rcout`, then everything goes right >> again. So, there might be something wrong even if `R_TopLevelExec` is used. >> >> Well, I guess this bug might be hard to debug, but we should let the >> others aware about this at least, right? >> >> Best, >> Wush >> _______________________________________________ >> 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 > >
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