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I have a global structure called xbar. I calloc 3 of these, and then pass a local pointer to a function where it is assigned to a short array inside the global function. But then when I try to use memcpy to copy the pointed-to data, I get an "exception" error.

typedef struct s_xbar
{
    short close[390][9000];
} xbar;
xbar *Xbar;

void assignPtr(short *qdata)
{
    qdata = Xbar[0].close[0];
}

void mycode( void )
{
    Xbar      =  (xbar  *)  calloc( 3,  sizeof(xbar));  

    short *qdata = NULL;
    assignPtr(qdata);

    short dataBarToFill[500];
    memcpy(dataBarToFill, qdata, 90 *  sizeof(short));
}

2 Answers 2

3

That is because in assignPtr() you only assigned Xbar[0].close[0] to a local copy of pointer qdata. After assignPtr() returns, the qdata in mycode() is still NULL. You should pass in pointer-to-pointer like the following:

void assignPtr(short **qdata)
{
    *qdata = Xbar[0].close[0];
}

void mycode( void )
{
    Xbar      =  (xbar  *)  calloc( 3,  sizeof(xbar));  

    short *qdata = NULL;
    assignPtr(&qdata);

    short dataBarToFill[500];
    memcpy(dataBarToFill, qdata, 90 *  sizeof(short));
}
2

C is a pass-by-value language, so you should pass the address of qdata:

void assignPtr(short **qdata)
{
    *qdata = Xbar[0].close[0];
}

void mycode( void )
{
    Xbar      =  (xbar  *)  calloc( 3,  sizeof(xbar));  

    short *qdata = NULL;
    assignPtr(&qdata);
    // ...
}

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