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I have a C static library with,

A callback definition:

typedef  void (*HandleEvents) (enum events eventID, int msgSize, char *msg);

A function in the library:

int init(HandleEvents _handleEvents)

And another C++ GUI developed in VS. which links this static lib and calls init function of the lib giving a function pointer.

init(&CGateway::handleEventsFunc);

where CGateway::handleEventsFunc is a static class function.

In a thread in the static lib calls this callback of the C++ GUI. But I got errors of heap corruption.

In sum, there are 2 threads, one in static library and one in Main GUI app. Static library calls Main GUI's class function.

So what is the correct way of calling callback function in a thread?

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    Nothing you have posted here seems bad. I would make sure that any memory accessed by multiple threads is properly protected.
    – Dolphin
    Nov 19, 2009 at 15:50
  • You should NOT be using static members of a class as a C callback. The ABI of C++ is not defined and thus where the static member expects to find its parameters is undefined. You just happen to be getting lucky with this version of your compiler (The next version may not work the same way making it really hard to find the bug). The only Correct way to pass a callback to a C lib from C++ is to pass a extern "C" function. Anything else is non portable. Nov 19, 2009 at 16:41

2 Answers 2

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[incorrect statement about multiple heaps, as pointed out by Adisak, deleted]

One thing to check is, that you are not doing anything GUI related from the worker thread. Accessing windows is only safe from the main thread where they were created. If you have to update GUI stuff, you have to decouple that by using PostMessage().

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  • In fact, my callback accesses static Class instance and change a value in it and exits while main thread sleeps. Can this cause problem?
    – whoi
    Nov 19, 2009 at 16:14
  • As long as it's a simple value change (no delete/new or so) and you are sure that the other thread is not modifying it at the same time, I'd say that should cause no problem.
    – Steffen
    Nov 19, 2009 at 16:36
  • Incorrect. Statically linked libraries see the exact same malloc/free and new/delete (even if overridden) functions as the program code and do not have their own heaps (you'd have to do quite a bit of work to make each static library have it's own heap actually).
    – Adisak
    Nov 19, 2009 at 16:41
  • +1 I agree. Any libs you write should by build against the dynamic version (DLL) of the standard libs. About 10 years ago it was a real pain to write windows code because each lib had its own heap and memory allocated by a lib had to be deallocated by the same lib or the result was memory corruption and a crash. The solution to this problem was the DLL of the standard lib so that the whole application used the same heap. So use the solution MS spent so long devloping to get write so you youngsters can write code much easier (do not go down the dark side again). ;-) Nov 19, 2009 at 16:47
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    This simple rule is: If you make a DLL that statically links to clibs, that DLL will have it's own heap. If you make a static lib that links to user code, that static lib will share the same heap as the user code.
    – Adisak
    Nov 19, 2009 at 18:01
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Make sure to use a mutex or other form of thread protection for any variables that can be modified by one thread and are used (read or modified) by another thread.

In multithreaded code, heap corruption is quite often a symptom of code that is not thread-safe accessing memory.

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