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I am using memcpy function in my code and getting Segmentation Fault error when i run it. Following goes the code.

memcpy ((void *) ((unsigned int) core_data + (width * height * bpp)), (void *) core_data, (width * height * bpp));

core_data is unsigned short pointer and height, width and bpp are static int type. The value of (width * height * bpp) is 8355840. When i reduce this value, to say 10, the error is resolved. But in real case scenario i have to keep the value to 8355840. any solution ?

thanks

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  • Did you allocate memory to core_data, or at least initialised it to point to allocated memory somehow, before copying to it?
    – alk
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:06
  • What type is bpp if I may ask?
    – user2527098
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:07
  • Why the cast to (unsigned int)?
    – alk
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:08
  • @alk, no i haven't allocated any memory to core_data!
    – Sid
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:10
  • bpp is of static int type
    – Sid
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:10

1 Answer 1

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Please show more code.

Your use of casts is very strange, and there's too many parentheses in there to make it readable. You should rarely cast pointers to integers, and if you do you must use e.g. intptr_t to make sure that the integer is large enough to hold the pointer value (the number of bits in unsigned int might be smaller than the number of bits in unsigned short *), else the pointer is destroyed when casting.

It should just be:

memcpy(core_data + width * height * bpp, core_data, width * height * bpp);

Pointer arithmetic in C is a (very good) thing, you don't need to cast to/from integers just to compute addresses. Remember that pointer arithmetic is "scaled" by the size of the pointed-to objects, which might mean that bpp should just be 1 if core_data is a pointer to 16-bit integers and your pixels are 16-bit.

Also, of course, make sure that the memory is properly allocated, i.e. that you do:

core_data = malloc(2 * width * height * bpp * sizeof *core_data);

and have it return non-NULL.

Of course, we can further boost the niceness of this code by factoring out the size of one "frame":

const size_t frame_size = width * height * bpp;

Then we can use this wherever needed, to make it more clear what's going on:

core_data = malloc(2 * frame_size);

and:

memcpy(core_data + frame_size, core_data, frame_size);
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  • in this case bpp is 4, not 1.
    – Sid
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:16
  • @Sid But what does bpp mean? Is it "bytes per pixel"? If so, then the core_data pointer should be uint8_t *. Else, if pixels are 32-bit, why not make core_data into uint32_t * and drop bpp?
    – unwind
    Feb 28, 2014 at 9:17
  • +1 - casts were so weird I didn't even stop to think what the pointer arithmetic was for :) Feb 28, 2014 at 9:18

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