1

I have a function pointer in my shared library that i am using to call a main engine. (It works well) : func_ptr

I also have a python module that i import in my program, using boost::python::import("module")

A function in my python module:

def wrapper(function):
    function('TEST ')

and a function in my c++ program:

int function(char const *msg){
{
    func_ptr(msg); //this line crashes
    return 1;
}

When i'm calling my wrapper function with

module.attr("wrapper")(boost::python::make_function(function))

it crashes in my c++ function. (segfault)

gdb produces something like that :

http://pastebin.com/NRdupqp6

How to make it works ? Ty !

1 Answer 1

0

If the crash occurs in function() when invoking the function pointer func_ptr, then execution has already passed through the Boost.Python layers. Consider:

  • Verifying that func_ptr points to a valid function.
  • Testing that the function to which func_ptr points properly handles the argument value "TEST ".

With module.py:

def wrapper(function):
   return function('TEST ')

And main.cpp:

#include <iostream>
#include <boost/python.hpp>

void engine(const char* msg)
{
  std::cout << "engine: " << msg << std::endl;
}

void (*func_ptr)(const char* msg) = &engine;

int function(const char* msg)
{
  func_ptr(msg);
  return 42;
}

int main()
{
  Py_Initialize();

  namespace python = boost::python;
  try
  {
    // Import the 'module' module.
    python::object module = python::import("module");

    // Invoke the wrapper function in the module, providing function
    // as a callback.
    python::object result = 
        module.attr("wrapper")(python::make_function(&function));

    std::cout << "result: " << python::extract<int>(result) << std::endl;
  }
  catch (python::error_already_set&)
  {
    PyErr_Print();
  }
}

The application produces the following output:

engine: TEST 
result: 42

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