vote up 1 vote down star

Hi, I am trying to passing in 3 pointers to a DLL function. I have:

{

$code=1;
$len=100;
$str=" " x $len;

$function = new Win32::API(DLLNAME,'dllfunction','PPP','V');

$function->Call($code,$str,$len);

}

The DLL is defined as void dllfunction(int* a, char* str, int* len); The DLL will modify all the variables pointed by the three pointers.

However, I am segfaulting when I run this. The documentation for Win32::API specified that I should use actual variable name instead of the Perl variable references. Can anyone tell me what I am missing? Thanks.

*more information:

I added printf() in the DLL to print out the address of the three pointers, and printf in Perl to print out the reference of the three variables. And I get the following

DLL : Code = 0x10107458 Error = 0x10046b50 str = 0x10107460

Perl : Code = 0x101311b8 Error = 0x101312a8 str = 0x10131230

Any idea why the DLL is getting the wrong addresses?

****More information

After much debugging, I found out that this is happening when returning from the DLL function. I added printf("done\n"); as the very last line of this DLL function, and this does output, then the program segfaults. I guess its happening in Win32::API? Has anyone experienced this?

Also, I am able to access the initial variables of all the three variables from the DLL. So the pointer is passed correctly, but for some reason it causes a segfault when returning from the DLL. Maybe it's segfaulting when trying to copy the new data into the Perl variable?

flag
You may want to change one of your tags to reflect that this is a Perl-related question, as well. – Brian Dec 9 '08 at 20:18

5 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

AH!! I figured it out.

The problem was this

  1. And optionally you can specify the calling convention, this defaults to '__stdcall', alternatively you can specify '_cdecl'.

The dll function was exported with extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) so I figured maybe I should be using '_cdecl' flag.

Win32::API('dll','dllfunction','PPP','V','_cdecl');

works!

thanks everyone.

link|flag
Good find - I didn't even think about calling convention (but I should have, since most Win32 APIs use __stdcall instead of _cdecl). – Harper Shelby Dec 10 '08 at 19:58
vote up 0 vote down

I'm not a windows programmer but seeing:

for pointers you must use a variable name

to me means the variable names, not the variables themselves. Does this work?

$function->Call('code', 'str', 'len');

or maybe

$function->Call('$code', '$str', '$len');

Btw, I wouldn't expect the memory addresses to be the same. Win32::API will need to convert the Perl data elements into something that Windows can understand and I seriously doubt they would occupy the same physical memory space.

link|flag
I figured as much after thinking about the pointers little bit. But I am able to read the initial value of each of the variable from the DLL. So its passing the point correctly, but seg faults when returning from the DLL. – arnold Dec 9 '08 at 22:15
vote up 0 vote down

OK, I followed Adam's link to this page. According to that, the call should be:

$function->Call(code, $str, len)

The example code uses a function with an LPSTR (essentially a char*) parameter, and it uses the variable as you'd expect, but this bit here:

for pointers you must use a variable name (no Perl references, just a plain variable name).

seems to indicate that the code I listed in this post should work.

link|flag
I tried that as well but I am still getting seg fault. I took > for pointers you must use a variable name (no Perl references, just a plain variable name). as to do $function->Call($code, $str, $len) instead of $functino->Call(\$code,\$str,\$len); – arnold Dec 9 '08 at 21:46
vote up 0 vote down

I tried that too, both sending all three references, and sending 2 int references and 1 str variable. However, its still seg faulting. I agree with you that seg fault is certainly happening when the dll is trying to access bad memory address, but I can't quit figure out whats causing it :<

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

IANAPH, but I think you need to do use a reference, like so:

$function->Call(\$code, \$str, \$len)

The one I'm least sure about is $str - it may not need a reference. The segfault is almost certainly coming from the DLL trying to write to memory address 1 (or 100, depending on which it tries to write first).

link|flag
IANAPH either, but according to search.cpan.org/~acalpini/Win32-API-0.41/… you shouldn't use a reference for the $str parameter; I'm not sure about the other two parameters. – Adam Rosenfield Dec 9 '08 at 20:37
I tried that too, both sending all three references, and sending 2 int references and 1 str variable. However, its still seg faulting. I agree with you that seg fault is certainly happening when the dll is trying to access bad memory address, but I can't quit figure out whats causing it :< – arnold Dec 9 '08 at 21:47

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.