I'm having an infuriating issue here where I'm crashing on malloc
/calloc
/strdup
and I'm assuming currently that it's because of a buffer over run somewhere.
I'm finding this very difficult to find and I was wondering if any of you can offer me a hand. I'll post code snippets here, and link to full source.
File reading and array operations: (common.c)
char * S6_ReadFileBytes(const char* path)
FILE * file;
long length;
char * bytes = NULL;
file = fopen(path, "r");
fseek(file, 0, SEEK_END)
length = ftell(file);
fseek(file, 0, 0);
bytes = (char*)calloc(1, (size_t)length + 1);
fread(bytes, 1, (size_t)length, file);
return bytes;
S6_Array * S6_ArrayNew(size_t count, size_t typeSize)
S6_Array * a = (S6_Array*)malloc(sizeof(S6_Array));
a->typeSize = typeSize;
a->Length = count;
void * S6_ArrayGet(S6_Array * a, int idx)
return &((char*)a->Data)[idx * a->typeSize];
void S6_ArraySet(S6_Array * a, int idx, void * val)
memcpy(&((char*)a->Data)[idx * a->typeSize], val, a->typeSize);
void S6_ArrayGrow(S6_Array * a, int amount)
void * data;
data = realloc(a->Data, (a->Length + amount) * a->typeSize);
a->Data = data;
a->Length += amount;
void S6_ArrayPushBack(S6_Array * a, void* val)
S6_ArrayGrow(a, 1);
S6_ArraySet(a, a->Length - 1, val);
CSV Reading: (CSV.c)
void S6_CSV_PushRect(S6_Array ** rectangles, S6_Rectangle * rect)
if( !*rectangles )
*rectangles = S6_ArrayNew(1, sizeof(S6_Rectangle*));
S6_ArraySet(*rectangles, 0, &rect);
else
S6_ArrayPushBack(*rectangles, &rect);
int S6_CSV_ReadRects(const char* file, S6_Array ** rectangles)
char * bytes = S6_ReadFileBytes(file);
char * line;
char * nameIndex;
size_t nameLength;
S6_Rectangle * tempRect;
line = strtok( bytes , "\n");
while( line )
nameIndex = strstr(line, ",");
tempRect = (S6_Rectangle*)calloc(1, sizeof(S6_Rectangle));
nameLength = (size_t)(nameIndex - line) + 1;
strncpy(tempRect->name, line, nameLength-1);
tempRect->name[nameLength-1] = '\0';
sscanf(nameIndex, "%*[,]%d%*[,]%d%*[,]%d%*[,]%d", &tempRect->x, &tempRect->y, &tempRect->w, &tempRect->h)
S6_CSV_PushRect(rectangles , tempRect);
strtok(NULL, "\n");
free(bytes);
A function where I modify the array: (BinPacker.c)
int S6_BinPacker_Pack(S6_Array * rectangles, int binSize)
// This sort appears to be working fine. View pastebin for test.
qsort(rectangles->Data, rectangles->Length, sizeof(S6_Rectangle*), S6_BinPacker_CompareRects);
CSV Writing [CRASH] : (CSV.c)
void S6_CSV_WriteRects(const char* file, S6_Array * rectangles)
char * bytes = NULL;
char buffer[128];
S6_Rectangle * tempRect;
size_t i;
for( i = 0; i < rectangles->Length; ++i)
tempRect = *(S6_Rectangle**)S6_ArrayGet(rectangles, i);
memset(buffer, '\0', sizeof(buffer));
sprintf(buffer,
"%s,%d,%d,%d,%d\n",
tempRect->name,
temprect->x,
temprect->y,
temprect->w,
temprect->h);
if( bytes )
bytes = strcat(bytes, _strdup(buffer));
else
bytes = _strdup(buffer);
So I'm crashing here on the strcat(bytes, _strdup(buffer))
line. When I separate it out It's still the string duplication or any sort of allocation I've tried.
I get the following break dialog from visual studio:
Windows has triggered a breakpoint in myapp.exe.
This may be due to a corruption of the heap, which indicates a bug in Slant6.Debug.exe or any of the DLLs it has loaded.
This may also be due to the user pressing F12 while Slant6.Debug.exe has focus.
The output window may have more diagnostic information.
And the break point it triggers is in tidtable.c on
PFLS_GETVALUE_FUNCTION flsGetValue = FLS_GETVALUE;
SOLUTION
strdup doesn't do any allocations, and even if it did I would be leaking like crazy. So instead of:
bytes = strcat(bytes, _strdup(buffer));
in CSV.c, I replaced it with some manual string concatenation that's easier for me to read (and remember).
size_t oldSize = strlen(bytes);
size_t bufferSize = strlen(buffer);
size_t newSize = oldSize + bufferSize ;
char * newMem = (char*)calloc(newSize + 1, 1);
memcpy(newMem, bytes, newSize);
memcpy(&newMem[oldSize], buffer, bufferSize);
free(bytes);
bytes = newMem;
/SOLUTION
a->Data
inS6_ArrayNew
, probably to a newly allocated block of eithercount
orcount+1
bytes (it's not clear to me whatcount
exactly means here, but I notice that inS6_ReadFileBytes
you allocate an extra byte beyond the file size). Maybe this already solves your problem.