show/hide this revision's text 2 a little more explanation and addressed a concern in the comments

It's faulty pointer arithmetic, either directly (through a pointer) or indirectly (by going past the end of an array). Check all your arrays. Don't forget that if your array is

 int a[4];

then a[4] doesn't exist.

What you're doing is overwriting something on the stack accidentally. The stack contains both locals, parameters, and the return address from your function. You might be damaging the return address in a way that the extra noops cures.

For example, if you have some code that is adding 4 something to the return address, inserting the those extra four 16 bytes of noops will would cure the problem, because instead of returning past the next line of code, you return into the middle of some noops.

One way you might be adding something to the return address is by going past the end of a local array or a parameter, for example

  int a[4];
  a[4]++;
show/hide this revision's text 1

It's faulty pointer arithmetic, either directly (through a pointer) or indirectly (by going past the end of an array). Check all your arrays. Don't forget that if your array is

 int a[4];

then a[4] doesn't exist.

What you're doing is overwriting something on the stack accidentally. The stack contains both locals, parameters, and the return address from your function. You might be damaging the return address in a way that the extra noops cures. For example, if you have some code that is adding 4 to the return address, inserting the extra four bytes of noops will cure the problem.