Stovetops are made of glass-ceramic which has extremely low thermal expansion, hence no cracking from temperature change. In fact, the coefficient is with $0.1 \cdot 10^{-6} \ 1/K$ even lower than that of Borosolicate glass at $3.3 \cdot 10^{-6} \ 1/K$. Since glass-ceramic can reach a negative coefficient of thermal expansion, getting even closer to zero is just a matter of engineering (thanks to @Volker Siegel for this interesting fact).
The brand name for one kind of glass-ceramic, Ceran (by German company Schott) is in German often used to generally describe glass-ceramic stovetops. Borosilicate glass is, to my knowledge, used only for heat-resistant cookware, but not the stovetops themselves.