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I have an application wich produce memory heap exception (corruption).

On the web I have found this kind of sentence :

"GFlags.exe: A heap debug program. Using GFlags, you can establish standard, /full, or /dlls heap options that will force the operating system to generate access violations and corruption errors when your program overwrites heap memory. "

But concretely how can I with GFlags or Windbg find the line in my source code which causes the bug?

Is there any good/synthetic paper on the web?

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GFlags can cause the heap manager in Windows to behave differently to aid debugging of heap problems.

When used with /full option your program will “crash” due to an access violation if you access an allocated buffer past its length.

(Without GFlags /full, the program may continue and the problem appear much later) You can utilize just in time debugging with VS or WinDbg or collect a crash dump.

The debugger should now point to the error (Instruction Pointer) and hopefully you will find the statement in your source that caused the bug.

Be aware that the /full option causes the program to use much more memory and can therefore only be used on relatively small programs. If the /full option doesn’t cause a “crash” try also with /full /backwards.

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  • you see IP via !analyse -v for instance ? Jan 3, 2012 at 13:27
  • Yes with source and .prd available you may also see a sniplet of the source. But uf the error is caused by a illegal parameter to f.eks memcpy you must walk the stack back to your code. Jan 3, 2012 at 21:48

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