SPRAB89A September 2011 – March 2014
The C6000 EABI employs table-driven exception handling (TDEH). TDEH implements exception handling for languages that support exceptions, such as C++.
TDEH uses tables to encode information needed to handle exceptions. The tables are part of the program's read-only data. When an exception is thrown, the exception handling code in the runtime support library propagates the exception by unwinding the stack to the stack frame representing a function with a catch clause that will catch the exception. As the stack is unwound, locally-defined objects must be destroyed (by calling the destructor) along the way. The tables encode information about how to unwind the stack, which objects to destroy when, and where to transfer control when the exception is finally caught.
TDEH tables are generated into executable files by the linker, using information generated into relocatable files by the compiler. This section specifies the format and encoding of the tables, and how the information is used to propagate exceptions. An ABI-conforming toolchain must generate tables in the format specified here.