4

I understand blocks are objective c objects and can be put in NSDictionary directly without Block_copy when using ARC. But I got EXC_BAD_ACCESS error with this code:

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];
    [self method1:^(BOOL result){
        NSLog(@"method1WithBlock finished %d", result);
    }];
}

- (void) method1:(void (^)(BOOL))finish{

    NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:^(NSData *rcb){
        finish(YES);
    }, @"success",
                          ^(NSError *error){
                              finish(NO);
                         }, @"failure",  nil];

    [self method2:dict];
}


- (void) method2:(NSDictionary *)dict{
    void (^success)(NSData *rcb) = [dict objectForKey:@"success"];
    success(nil);
}

If I change method1: to this, no error raised.

- (void) method1:(void (^)(BOOL))finish{
    void (^success)(NSData *)  = ^(NSData *rcb){
        finish(YES);
    };

    void (^failure)(NSError *error) = ^(NSError *error){
        finish(NO);
    };
    NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:success, @"success",
                          failure, @"failure",  nil];
    [self method2:dict];
}

Can anybody explain why I have to use automatic variables to store the blocks before putting them to dictionary ?

I am using iOS SDK 6.1.

3 Answers 3

5

According to the "Transitioning to ARC Release Notes", you have to copy a block stored in a dictionary (emphasis mine):

Blocks “just work” when you pass blocks up the stack in ARC mode, such as in a return. You don’t have to call Block Copy any more. You still need to use [^{} copy] when passing “down” the stack into arrayWithObjects: and other methods that do a retain.

The second method works "by chance" because success and failure are a __NSGlobalBlock__ and not a "stack based block" that needs to be copied to the heap.

8
  • so the difference between the two method1: is block literal on stack and block object on heap? Jul 20, 2013 at 14:22
  • is __NSGlobalBlock__ documented ? Jul 20, 2013 at 14:38
  • @user1122742: Actually, when you type "po dict" in the debugger in your first method1:, you will see that success is a __NSMallocBlock__ and error is a __NSStackBlock__. The difference is probably caused by the fact that dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: takes a variable argument list. I would just leave that as in implementation detail and stick to the documentation which clearly says that you have to copy blocks that are put into an array or dictionary.
    – Martin R
    Jul 20, 2013 at 14:39
  • @user1122742: I don't think that __NSGlobalBlock__ is documented, it is an implementation detail. You can have a look at cocoawithlove.com/2009/10/how-blocks-are-implemented-and.html for some instructive explanations (but that article is pre-ARC). If you are really courageous, read clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html :-)
    – Martin R
    Jul 20, 2013 at 14:46
  • 1
    @abbood: Yes, that's how I understand the documentation that I linked to.
    – Martin R
    Jul 20, 2013 at 15:14
0

I understand blocks are objective c objects and can be put in NSDictionary directly without Block_copy when using ARC.

No, they're not common objects. When you create a block it is on the stack, and it doesn't matter of what is it's retain count, when you exit form the function it will be popped from the stack. Copy it to make it stay alive.

0

You must copy blocks before passing them to a method when 1) the block will be stored for longer than the duration of the call, and 2) the parameter you are passing it to is a normal object pointer type (i.e. id or NSObject *) instead of a block type.

This is the case for your call. dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys: stores the argument in the resulting dictionary, and it simply expects normal object pointer arguments (of type id), and does not know whether you are passing blocks or not.

The reason for the second condition I said is because if the method parameter already takes a block type (e.g. for any completion handler parameters), then that method is already aware of the special memory management requirements of blocks, and therefore will take responsibility for copying the block if it needs to store it. In that case the caller doesn't need to worry about it. However, in your case, you are passing it to a general method that doesn't know it's getting a block, and thus doesn't know to copy it. So the caller must do it.

Can anybody explain why I have to use automatic variables to store the blocks before putting them to dictionary ?

About this, your second example happens to work because recent versions of the ARC compiler is super conservative about blocks and inserts copies whenever you assign it to a block type variable. However, this is not guaranteed by the ARC specification, and is not guaranteed to work in the future, or in another compiler. You should not rely on this behavior.

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