I'm trying to use std:getline() but getting a strange runtime error:

malloc: * error for object 0x10000a720: pointer being freed was not allocated * set a breakpoint in malloc_error_break to debug

This is the code that produces this error:

//main.cpp
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>

int main (int argc, char * const argv[])
{
   std::istringstream my_str("demo string with spaces");
   std::string word;

   while (std::getline(my_str, word, ' ')) {
        std::cout << word << std::endl;
   }
   return 0;
}

Before each word I get this error. From the comments it seems to be a OSX/XCode specific error. Any hints on that?

Update: The error is only printed in Debug mode. If I build this code in Release mode everything is fine.

Update 2: More info on that issue can be found here.

Solution:

Set

_GLIBCXX_FULLY_DYNAMIC_STRING=1

in your Preprocessor Macros in targets info build tab.

System info:

OSX 10.6.2 | XCode 3.2 | g++ 4.2 | debug config for i386

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It runs fine on my machine. I'm not using a MacBook though so that might have something to do with it maybe but on XP with VS2008 it compiles and runs fine. – ihtkwot Feb 10 '10 at 5:18
1  
Likewise, it compiles and runs without errors on my PPC Powerbook. Mac OS 10.4 with g++ 4.0.1. And it looks right... – dmckee Feb 10 '10 at 5:21
Compiles and runs fine under Visual Studio 2008 for me too. – Scott Smith Feb 10 '10 at 5:24
Works fine for me on my MacBook Pro with 10.5.8 g++ 4.0.1 and valgrind doesn't report anything suspicious either. – Michael Anderson Feb 10 '10 at 5:26
1  
@dan: Looks like your setup may be wonky somehow. Try it with terminal g++ in a fresh terminal, then consider a reboot, then consider a reinstallation of the developer tools. – dmckee Feb 10 '10 at 5:45
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1 Answer

up vote 10 down vote accepted

At least one person has reported problems with g++ 4.2.1 on Apple that seem possibly related to yours having to do with an improper configuration of the standard library with the _GLIBCXX_FULLY_DYNAMIC_STRING definition (not that I understand any of what I'm typing here).

You might get a bit of a clue from the newsgroup thread that includes this message:

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This is it. I reproduced the problem and fixed it by adding _GLIBCXX_FULLY_DYNAMIC_STRING to the target settings window. (Do not add it to the "Preprocessing" section of the Project settings window; that does nothing. XCode, grrrrr…) – Potatoswatter Feb 10 '10 at 7:27
Since this is a team effort, would someone like to report a bug? – Potatoswatter Feb 10 '10 at 7:29
Thanks a lot... – dan Feb 10 '10 at 8:21
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