I'd like some technical information on how it works, and how I can disable or enumerate the Fault Tolerant Heap shims that are associated with processes that crash frequently. Is there a heuristic of some sort that Windows 7 uses to decide when to apply an FTH shim?
1 Answer
Fault Tolerant Heap is a layer over the heap that defends against common heap errors, such as heap overruns, double frees, and so on. To my knowledge, there is only one FTH shim - not multiple for each mitigation. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd744764(VS.85).aspx describes how you can monitor if FTH is being enabled for an application via the event log.
I don't believe MS has published the exact heuristic that will enable the FTH, but yes, there is a heuristic.
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1Today I also noticed a debug output string that shows FTH is being enabled for a process I was debugging: OutputDebugString FTH: (9556): *** Fault tolerant heap shim applied to current process. This is usually due to previous crashes. *** Jul 10, 2010 at 19:20
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Mark Russinovich talked about this at PDC 2010. The problem is that I don't remember which talk it was part 1 or part 2: channel9.msdn.com/Events/PDC/…– ZippyVMay 10, 2011 at 20:04