I ask for your patience about the lack of code snippets in this question and the its vagueness, but I'm totally clueless, I don't have any clue about the location of the bug, and I cannot paste an entire application.
I have a cross platform application which opens a file through the normal C
API (fopen
etc), writes some data (first passing the buffer to zlib to deflate it, but I don't think that this is relevant) for a consistent time, and finally flushes and close it.
This works perfectly fine on all platform, except for the 64 bit build on Windows OS x64 with UAC turned on. Basically, on that precise setup, it seems that the file buffer is literally interlaced with what I've sent to stdout
between the time I open the file and I flush it, as if any write to stdout
used the same buffer of the other file.
It is important to note that this shouldn't be related to any file system virtualization (the VirtualStore
mechanism), as I'm writing in %USERPROFILE%\Saved Games\
. The problem is surely related to UAC because if I turn it off, the problem isn't happening. No problem in wine64
also.
Any pointer is valuable. Compiler is g++ 4.7.0 (cross compiling from linux).
printf (some-text)/fopen (some-file-in-%userprofile%-saved-games)/fprintf (some-different-text)/fclose()
"? Q: What do you mean "cross compiling gcc 4.7.0 from Linux"? And Q: Have you tried compiling directly on Windows (e.g. using MSVC?)