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c++memory-leakslanguage-lawyerdestructorgoto

Can goto jump across functions without destructors being called?


Is it true that goto jumps across bits of code without calling destructors and things?

e.g.

void f() {
   int x = 0;
   goto lol;
}

int main() {
   f();
lol:
   return 0;
}

Won't x be leaked?


Solution

  • Warning: This answer pertains to C++ only; the rules are quite different in C.


    Won't x be leaked?

    No, absolutely not.

    It is a myth that goto is some low-level construct that allows you to override C++'s built-in scoping mechanisms. (If anything, it's longjmp that may be prone to this.)

    Consider the following mechanics that prevent you from doing "bad things" with labels (which includes case labels).


    1. Label scope

    You can't jump across functions:

    void f() {
       int x = 0;
       goto lol;
    }
    
    int main() {
       f();
    lol:
       return 0;
    }
    
    // error: label 'lol' used but not defined
    

    [n3290: 6.1/1]: [..] The scope of a label is the function in which it appears. [..]


    2. Object initialisation

    You can't jump across object initialisation:

    int main() {
       goto lol;
       int x = 0;
    lol:
       return 0;
    }
    
    // error: jump to label ‘lol’
    // error:   from here
    // error:   crosses initialization of ‘int x’
    

    If you jump back across object initialisation, then the object's previous "instance" is destroyed:

    struct T {
       T() { cout << "*T"; }
      ~T() { cout << "~T"; }
    };
    
    int main() {
       int x = 0;
    
      lol:
       T t;
       if (x++ < 5)
         goto lol;
    }
    
    // Output: *T~T*T~T*T~T*T~T*T~T*T~T
    

    [n3290: 6.6/2]: [..] Transfer out of a loop, out of a block, or back past an initialized variable with automatic storage duration involves the destruction of objects with automatic storage duration that are in scope at the point transferred from but not at the point transferred to. [..]

    You can't jump into the scope of an object, even if it's not explicitly initialised:

    int main() {
       goto lol;
       {
          std::string x;
    lol:
          x = "";
       }
    }
    
    // error: jump to label ‘lol’
    // error:   from here
    // error:   crosses initialization of ‘std::string x’
    

    ... except for certain kinds of object, which the language can handle regardless because they do not require "complex" construction:

    int main() {
       goto lol;
       {
          int x;
    lol:
          x = 0;
       }
    }
    
    // OK
    

    [n3290: 6.7/3]: It is possible to transfer into a block, but not in a way that bypasses declarations with initialization. A program that jumps from a point where a variable with automatic storage duration is not in scope to a point where it is in scope is ill-formed unless the variable has scalar type, class type with a trivial default constructor and a trivial destructor, a cv-qualified version of one of these types, or an array of one of the preceding types and is declared without an initializer. [..]


    3. Jumping abides by scope of other objects

    Likewise, objects with automatic storage duration are not "leaked" when you goto out of their scope:

    struct T {
       T() { cout << "*T"; }
      ~T() { cout << "~T"; }
    };
    
    int main() {
       {
          T t;
          goto lol;
       }
    
    lol:
       return 0;
    }
    
    // *T~T
    

    [n3290: 6.6/2]: On exit from a scope (however accomplished), objects with automatic storage duration (3.7.3) that have been constructed in that scope are destroyed in the reverse order of their construction. [..]


    Conclusion

    The above mechanisms ensure that goto doesn't let you break the language.

    Of course, this doesn't automatically mean that you "should" use goto for any given problem, but it does mean that it is not nearly as "evil" as the common myth leads people to believe.