In summary: Today I discovered that when a DLL is built without precompiled headers, a strange error shows when you try to use it.
Building the DLL goes fine when precompiled headers are disabled. However as soon as the DLL is attached (either compile-time or run-time) it results in the error "Invalid parameter". The actual error codes are different for both cases. When attaching compile-time a dialog pops up with error code 0xc000000d, when calling LoadLibrary()
it returns a NULL
pointer and GetLastError()
returns 0x57.
EDITs:
I discovered that the problem goes away when incremental linking is disabled. Somehow I missed the following error showed by Visual Studio when running a client that attaches to the DLL compile-time:
'TestClient.exe': Loaded 'D:\Projects\PchDllTest2\Debug\TestClient.exe', Symbols loaded.
'TestClient.exe': Loaded 'C:\WINDOWS\system32\ntdll.dll', Cannot find or open the PDB file
'TestClient.exe': Loaded 'C:\WINDOWS\system32\kernel32.dll', Cannot find or open the PDB file
'TestClient.exe': Loaded 'D:\Projects\PchDllTest2\Debug\TestDll.dll', Symbols loaded.
SXS: RtlCreateActivationContext() failed 0xc000000d
LDR: LdrpWalkImportDescriptor() failed to probe D:\Projects\PchDllTest2\Debug\TestDll.dll for its manifest, ntstatus 0xc000000d
Debugger:: An unhandled non-continuable exception was thrown during process load
The program '[5292] TestClient.exe: Native' has exited with code -1073741811 (0xc000000d).
As requested, the function declaration:
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
MYTEST_API int MyTestFoo(int a);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
There's one thing that is remarkable about this: When you create a new DLL using a wizard (New project -> Visual C++ -> Win32 -> Win32 Project), the wizard forces you to use precompiled headers when selecting DLL as application type. See answer from ta.speot.is.
I drastically changed the question, as it looked first like I thought that it was somehow documented that PCH is required for DLL projects. This is not the case, it's probably a weird kind of bug (let's hope it's not) or probably I'm doing something very stupid...
DllMain
just returnsTRUE
, and the DLL only contains one hello world style function. The function isexport "C"
, and the DLL contains no C++ classes. Also I don't have any global variables.