I am new with the usage of for ***'Address use ***
. And I was wondering what are the limitation of this usage. So I created the following procedure:
procedure letshack (A : System.Address) is
My_String : String(1..100000);
for My_String'Address use A;
begin
Put(My_String);
end;
And this raise a EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION
while the same code with a String that is 100 length don't raise it. More over if i don't use the integer address, this code works properly.
So what are the limitation of for ***'Address use ***
usage.
Ps : I am using Ada 95 but any information is welcome.
Edit: I understand a part of the behavior. And this is what I suppose. When you start your program a certain stack is allocated and you can write and read in it. Indeed I Wrote the 5th byte with an integer address
Real Addresses |----------------------------| Virtual Addresses
0x48000|Stack Origine |0x00
| |
| |
| |
| |
|End of Stack |
0x48000+range|----------------------------|0x00+range
And you get EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION if you are out of stack. It seems strange for a "strong" language if it is right. Because it means you can rewrite your own stack and make bad behave.
pragma Import(Ada, My_String);
(or the equivalent aspect), to prevent any default initialization of the overlaying object (My_String in this case)