For some odd reason, my application likes to break on me when I switch to release and run it outside of my debugger. Here’s what works for me, and here’s what doesn’t
(Qt Creator is the IDE)
- Debugging with debug configuration – ok
- Running with debug configuration – ok
- Debugging with release configuration – ok
- Running with release configuration – application crash
My UI is one project, and the core for some stuff as a separate dependency. On Windows (compiling with MSVCC), I hit a menu button, which eventually calls down to a function. In that function, the app breaks on adding a new element to a vector. e.g:
str *x = new str();
str *y = new str();
/* ...set some of x & y's members... */
vector.push_back(x); // works fine
vector.push_back(y); // causes crash
If I comment out the line vector.push_back(y);, the app continues no problem until the app leaves the event scope (i.e. the end of OnMenuButtonClick). On OS X, it’s similar to the issue of adding an element to a vector, except I have:
std::vector<foo *> SomeFunction()
{
std::vector<foo *> returningVector;
/* do stuff */
std::vector<foo *> goo = GetFooObjects();
for (int i = 0; i < goo.size(); i++)
{
returningVector.push_back(goo[i]); // breaks here
}
}
So what are some causes of this strange behavior without a debugger attached and not under debug configuration? I’ve checked to make sure all of my variables are initialized, so I’m stumped. If you want to view the code above, the first part can be located here, and the second part here. Please forgive anything you see as “bad”, and if you have suggestions that you just can’t contain, then please do message me on GitHub.
Edit:
I looked more into it, and found out exactly what’s causing the problem, but don’t know how to fix it. This is the function where my app crashes (on OS X):
vector<Drive *> Drive::GetFATXDrives( bool HardDisks )
{
vector<Drive *> Return;
if (HardDisks)
{
vector<DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION> Disks = GetPhysicalDisks();
for (int i = 0; i < (int)Disks.size(); i++)
{
DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION ddi = Disks.at(i);
// First, try reading the disk way
Streams::xDeviceStream* DS = NULL;
try
{
char path[0x200] = {0};
wcstombs(path, ddi.Path, wcslen(ddi.Path));
DS = new Streams::xDeviceStream(ddi.Path);
}
catch (xException& e)
{
continue;
}
if (DS == NULL || DS->Length() == 0 || DS->Length() < HddOffsets::Data)
{
// Disk is not of valid length
continue;
}
DS->SetPosition(HddOffsets::Data);
// Read the FATX partition magic
int Magic = DS->ReadInt32();
// Close the stream
DS->Close();
// Compare the magic we read to the *actual* FATX magic
if (Magic == FatxMagic)
{
Drive *d = new Drive(Disks.at(i).Path, Disks.at(i).FriendlyName, false);
Return.push_back(d);
}
}
}
vector<Drive *> LogicalDisks = GetLogicalPartitions();
for (int i = 0; i < (int)LogicalDisks.size(); i++)
{
Return.push_back(LogicalDisks.at(i));
}
return Return;
}
If I change if (HardDisks) to if (HardDisks = false), the app works just fine. So, I looked into that scope and discovered that after vector<DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION> Disks = GetPhysicalDisks();, the heap gets corrupt or something like that. I noticed this because in the debugger, after that function is called, my HardDisks bool changes to “false”, which wasn’t what it was before.
Here is GetPhysicalDisks:
vector<Drive::DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION> Drive::GetPhysicalDisks( void )
{
// RIGHT AFTER this vector is initialized, everything goes to hell
vector<Drive::DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION> ReturnVector;
DIR *dir;
dirent *ent;
dir = opendir("/dev/");
if (dir != NULL)
{
// Read the shit
while ((ent = readdir(dir)) != NULL)
{
// Check the directory name, and if it starts with "disk" then keep it!
QRegExp exp("disk*");
exp.setPatternSyntax(QRegExp::Wildcard);
exp.setCaseSensitivity(Qt::CaseInsensitive);
if (exp.exactMatch(ent->d_name))
{
DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION curdir;
memset(curdir.FriendlyName, 0, sizeof(curdir.FriendlyName));
memset(curdir.Path, 0, sizeof(curdir.Path));
char diskPath[0x50] = {0};
sprintf(diskPath, "/dev/r%s", ent->d_name);
mbstowcs(curdir.Path, diskPath, strlen(diskPath));
int device;
if ((device = open(diskPath, O_RDONLY)) > 0)
{
#ifdef __linux
hd_driveid hd;
if (!ioctl(device, HDIO_GET_IDENTITY, &hd))
{
swprintf(curdir.FriendlyName, strlen(hd) * 2, L"%hs", hd.model);
}
#elif defined __APPLE__
mbstowcs(curdir.FriendlyName, ent->d_name, strlen(ent->d_name));
#endif
ReturnVector.push_back(curdir);
}
}
}
}
return ReturnVector;
}
While this isn’t a real answer as to what happened, I did find a way to fix the problem. Looking at my edit above, I edited my
Drive::GetFATXDrivesfunction like so:And my
Drive::GetPhysicalDisksfunction now takes avector<DISK_DRIVE_INFORMATION>reference instead of returning one. Seemed to make my program work just fine after that.