I am curious to know what happens when the stack and the heap collide. If anybody has encountered this, please could they explain the scenario.
Thanks in advance.
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In a modern languages running on a modern OS, you'll get either a stack overflow (hurray!) or
I'm always amazed at the willingness of compiler writers to hope that the OS puts guard pages in place to prevent stack overflow. Of course, this trick works well until you start having thousands of threads, each with its own stack... |
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This would be platform dependent. On many platforms it actually can't happen at all (the heap and stack are allocated in different pages and ne'r the twain shall meet. Keep in mind that the idea of the heap growing upward and the stack growing downward is only conceptual. On very small systems (like the old 8-bit micros that ran CP/M) and on some PICs and other flat memory model systems (those without an MMU nor any other virtual or protected memory support) then the heap and stack might be actually implemented this way. In that case the behavior would be undefined ... but it would almost certainly crash as soon as the code tried to return to some address on the top of the corrupted stack or follow an indirect pointer from one part of the heap to another or ... In any event you won't see it on any modern, general purpose workstation or server. You'll hit a resource limit and get malloc failures, or you'll run into virtual memory and eventually the system will thrash itself into quivering pile of "hit the red switch." |
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In times like those it's time to turn to the sage words of Dr Egon Spengler....
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You get an out of memory exception or stack exception if you are lucky. If you are unlucky the program heads off into a invalid memory and either throws a bad memory exception. If you are extremely unlucky the program carries on and trashes something it shouldn't and you never know why your program failed. Finally of course the universe may crack. |
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