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I'm developing the application, which will get mails from servers via pop/imap protocols using C++/Winsock.

Cause, the code is large to paste here , I give you the link on pastebin:
http://pastebin.com/uCKcTQsj

It doesn't have any compiler errors, so it can be copmpiled well.

I'm getting different result of its work, sometimes all working ok, but often I get the result:

Unhandled exception at 0x773f15de (ntdll.dll) in alex.exe: 0xC0000005:
Access violation reading location 0x00648000.

Why do I get different result of its work ( often cathing access violation, but sometimes it works )?

Are there any ways to catch and handle violation exceptions ( may be from lower secrity rings, as I understand , these exceptions are throwing from ntdll.dll in native mode ) to fix this problem?

Thanks, best regards!

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    how can I catch exception with try block, if this exception was thrown from lower security ring from ntdll.dll, this exc was thrown not from user-mode
    – user1131997
    Jan 19, 2012 at 19:51
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    You need to fix the problem by fixing bugs in the code, not by catching exceptions for invalid memory accesses. Running under a debugger and looking at the call stack for the exception will probably point you to most of your problem areas. Jan 19, 2012 at 19:56
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    yeah... under the debugger, I've got exception in ostream ( where I'm enumarating the char* buffer ) on returning the return (_Ostr);
    – user1131997
    Jan 19, 2012 at 20:15

2 Answers 2

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+50

Access violation means that you're accessing memory that hasn't been allocated to your application.

You get random successes/failures because sometimes memory that you're trying to access will be allocated to your application, sometimes it won't be.

Either way, the problem is that you're trying to access memory that hasn't been malloced (or newed). I.e. you're either trying to dereference/write to/read from a "dangling" or "wild" pointer, or you're trying to read/write beyond the boundaries of a memory block a properly allocated pointer points to.

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Your header struct contains this array:

char buffer[0x1000];

But you treat it as a null terminated C string in several places without making sure that it is actually null terminated.

For example, in Inet::GetResponse():

int result = recv((*sock), buffer, strlen(buffer), 0)

I don't think that strlen(buffer) will return anything meaningful. You probably should use sizeof(buffer).

But even when you're dealing with received data, there's no guarantee that the data will be null terminated - even if the protocol does terminate records with nulls. With TCP a recv() can return only part of a sent record, so even in situations where a null is sent, it might not be received yet. In particular, the POP3 and IMAP protocols do not terminate responses with a null octet. So unless you make sure the '\0' is there, strlen() and friends cannot be used.

You need to carefully reexamine how you're handling the buffer size and the amount of data received in that code.

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    with sizeof() the same result :(((
    – user1131997
    Jan 19, 2012 at 19:54
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    I know, that some data may not be recieved yet, and that's why using Sleep() function to wait for incoming data.
    – user1131997
    Jan 19, 2012 at 20:06
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    That'll probably work most of the time, but you really should use the result returned by recv(). Jan 19, 2012 at 20:34
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    I was wondering what the comparison with -52 was doing in HandleResponse() - you're depending on the compiler to 'initialize' the buffer with 0xCC values. You realize that that's just a debugging helper - please don't write code that depends on that behavior (it depends on a specific compiler options being enabled, and won't generally occur in release builds). Jan 19, 2012 at 20:40
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    -52 is the value of empty char, if you create smth like char *buff; look at its content in the debugger, you can see only -52 values...
    – user1131997
    Jan 19, 2012 at 20:46

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