5

How to intentionally crash an application with an AccessViolationException in c#?

I have a console application that use an unmanaged DLL that eventually crashes because of access violation exceptions. Because of that, I need to intentionally throw an AccessViolationException to test how it behaves under certain circumstances.

Besides that, it must be specifically an AccessViolationException because this exception is not handled by the catch blocks.

Surprisingly, this does not work:

public static void Crash()
{
    throw new AccessViolationException();
}

Neither this:

public static unsafe void Crash()
{
    for (int i = 1; true; i++)
    {
        var ptr = (int*)i;
        int value = *ptr;
    }
}
6
  • Did you read this part of the documentation?
    – user47589
    May 30, 2019 at 21:19
  • If I understand correctly the documentation --> By default, the common language runtime (CLR) does not deliver these exceptions to managed code, and the try/catch blocks (and other exception-handling clauses) are not invoked for them. If you are absolutely sure that you want to maintain your handling of these exceptions, you must apply the HandleProcessCorruptedStateExceptionsAttribute attribute to the method whose exception-handling clauses you want to execute May 30, 2019 at 21:28
  • 2
    Second snippet is certainly on the right track. But use *(int*)0x10000 = 0; to generate an AVE instead of a NRE, addresses below 0x10000 are assumed to be caused by null pointers. May 30, 2019 at 21:55
  • @HansPassant, could you explain why 10000? Is it just a random value far away from the reserved memory?
    – Rafael Biz
    May 30, 2019 at 22:11
  • 1
    Lot of history, goes back to Windows NT, the first 32-bit version of Windows. They were pretty worried that programmers would not port their 16-bit programs correctly. By making all of the memory below 0x10000 inaccessible they could generate a useful diagnostic. A null pointer can also generate memory accesses to addresses that are not 0, happens when a program accesses a field of an object. C# has a pretty nice guarantee that this can't cause a misleading exception, it generates code that checks the address of the object before doing anything with it. May 30, 2019 at 22:22

2 Answers 2

6

A Deterministic approach is to have Windows throw it for you:

From Петър Петров's answer to: How to make C# application crash

[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
static extern void RaiseException(uint dwExceptionCode, uint dwExceptionFlags,  uint nNumberOfArguments, IntPtr lpArguments);

void start()
{
    RaiseException(0xC0000005, 0, 0, new IntPtr(1));
}
2

This is the "native" way - although the @Storm approach is 100% deterministic. Trick is to attempt to write into memory far away from the current pointer. I.E. even though I allocated 4 bytes in my program, the next few thousand bytes are still within the part of memory reserved for my program. Shoot far away and you should get it.

int[] array = new int[1];
fixed (int* ptr = array)
{
      ptr[2000000] = 42;
}

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