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A personal project I'm working on is using tinyfiledialogs to help with some cross-platform gui stuff; this works great for the Unix systems I've tested on, however I've run up against a problem when testing on my Windows 8.1 64 bit machine.

The GetOpenFileName() function, when called from tinyfiledialogs.c, or from the below code, will execute correctly on the first call but crash shortly after the dialog window is presented on the second. However this only appears to be happening on my 64 bit machine - running the below code (or my code that uses tinyfiledialogs.c) on a Windows 7 32 bit machine works without issue.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <windows.h>

void openD(){

char Filestring[1024] = "\0";
OPENFILENAME ofn={0};

ofn.lStructSize = sizeof(OPENFILENAME);
ofn.lpstrFile = Filestring;
ofn.nMaxFile = 1024;
ofn.Flags = OFN_EXPLORER | OFN_ALLOWMULTISELECT;

int retval = GetOpenFileName(&ofn);
if(retval == 1) printf("True!\n");
else {
    printf("value: %d\n", retval);
    int err_val = CommDlgExtendedError();
    switch(err_val){
        case CDERR_DIALOGFAILURE:   printf("ERR: CDERR_DIALOGFAILURE\n");   break;
        case CDERR_FINDRESFAILURE:  printf("CDERR_FINDRESFAILURE\n");       break;
        case CDERR_INITIALIZATION:  printf("CDERR_INITIALIZATION\n");       break;
        case CDERR_LOADRESFAILURE:  printf("CDERR_LOADRESFAILURE\n");       break;
        case CDERR_LOADSTRFAILURE:  printf("CDERR_LOADSTRFAILURE\n");       break;
        case CDERR_LOCKRESFAILURE:  printf("CDERR_LOCKRESFAILURE\n");       break;
        case CDERR_MEMALLOCFAILURE: printf("CDERR_MEMALLOCFAILURE\n");      break;
        case CDERR_MEMLOCKFAILURE:  printf("CDERR_MEMLOCKFAILURE\n");       break;
        case CDERR_NOHINSTANCE:     printf("CDERR_NOHINSTANCE\n");          break;
        case CDERR_NOHOOK:          printf("CDERR_NOHOOK\n");               break;
        case CDERR_NOTEMPLATE:      printf("CDERR_NOTEMPLATE\n");           break;
        case CDERR_STRUCTSIZE:      printf("CDERR_STRUCTSIZE\n");           break;
        case FNERR_BUFFERTOOSMALL:  printf("FNERR_BUFFERTOOSMALL\n");       break;
        case FNERR_INVALIDFILENAME: printf("FNERR_INVALIDFILENAME\n");      break;
        case FNERR_SUBCLASSFAILURE: printf("FNERR_SUBCLASSFAILURE\n");      break;
    }
}
}

int main()
{
openD();
openD();
}

The first call returns TRUE, the second fails to return and the program crashes. Attaching to a running instantiation of the program with the VS Express 2012 Debugger catches the following exceptions when the second call is made; first a popup:

Unhandled exception at 0x759C36DC (shell32.dll) in ofd_64.exe: 0xC0000005: Access violation reading location 0x70017AD8.

Followed in Output by:

First-chance exception at 0x759C36DC (shell32.dll) in ofd_64.exe: 0xC0000005: Access violation reading location 0x70017AD8. Unhandled exception at 0x759C36DC (shell32.dll) in ofd_64.exe: 0xC0000005: Access violation reading location 0x70017AD8.

Over multiple trials on the Windows 8.1 machine the exceptions have remained constant.

Curiously, if I remove the OFN_EXPLORER flag the process executes normally for both calls. This isn't a good solution though. Any help would be appreciated.

Edit:

The call stack from VS Express 2012 shows:

shell32.dll!00007ffe6ef02777()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6ebbf1c4()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6ea5b5f3()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6ea5b555()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6ea5b493()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6ea5b386()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6eb07f02()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6eb86d78()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6e93bf9b()  Unknown
ExplorerFrame.dll!00007ffe5b912b30()    Unknown
ExplorerFrame.dll!00007ffe5b912abd()    Unknown
ExplorerFrame.dll!00007ffe5b8ff511()    Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6e8043ed()  Unknown
shell32.dll!00007ffe6e813e1f()  Unknown
SHCore.dll!00007ffe6c30142f()   Unknown
ntdll.dll!00007ffe71bab247()    Unknown
ntdll.dll!00007ffe71bc8e15()    Unknown
kernel32.dll!00007ffe706b13d2() Unknown
ntdll.dll!00007ffe71ba54e4()    Unknown
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  • Did you still have the problem in you compile a 64bits code (the execution trace shows that you're using a 32bits code)
    – Mathieu
    Feb 12, 2016 at 16:11
  • Is there a stack trace ? Feb 12, 2016 at 16:17
  • 1
    According to MSDN comments, there is a bug that might explain what you get: "When using MFC compiled for multibyte-characters, you MUST set lpstrFileTitle to a valid pointer". See msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/…
    – kuroi neko
    Feb 12, 2016 at 16:18
  • @purplepsycho Yes, the problem remains if I use the x64 Native Tools Command Prompt to compile
    – JawKnee
    Feb 12, 2016 at 16:33
  • @Michael Walz I have updated my post with the call stack info from the VS Express Debugger
    – JawKnee
    Feb 12, 2016 at 16:34

2 Answers 2

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As suggested to me elsewhere, I tried calling CoInitializeEx prior to the openD function calls - this has solved the problem, though I can't say why. It doesn't seem to matter whether I use the COINIT_APARTMENTTHREADED or COINIT_MULTITHREADED flag, either works. Perhaps it's just some oddity in my particular machine.

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Its a problem of the Stack Size. Do not overwrite default Stack Size in VC++ 32 Bit Properties -> Linker -> System -> Stack Reserved Size. Let it empty. So the problem was solved on 64 Bit systems.

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