How to measure the amount of memory consumed by the stack? - debugging

With Lauterbach TRACE32, how to measure the amount of memory consumed by the stack when the application is running?
I am using AUTOSAR OS on a PowerPC CPU.

In case you'd like to know the memory consumed by the stacks of the tasks I think the easiest way is to consult window TASK.STacK.view.
Ensure the following to get TASK.STacK.view working
Set-up the debuggers OS awareness (after loading your ELF), with TASK.ORTI for AUTOSAR or TASK.CONFIG for any other target OS.
Initialize the stacks of your task with a magic pattern, which can be done in the start code of your OS or with TRACE32 Data.Set command.
Possibly declare the magic initialization pattern to the debugger with command TASK.STacK.PATtern, if not detected by the OS awareness.
In case you'd like to know the memory consumed by the stack of a bare-metal application you have to check this via a PRACTICE script.
The basic idea here is to initialize the stack with a fixed pattern (before the application starts) and than check later which percentage of the stack does not longer contain the initialization pattern.
You can do this in the following three steps:
1st initialize your stack with a magic pattern after loading your ELF like this (or do this in the start-up code of your application):
GLOBAL &lowAddr &highAddr &magicPattern
&lowAddr=ADDRESS.OFFSET(__stack_start) // assign here the upper border of the addressrange occupied by your stack
&highAddr=ADDRESS.OFFSET(__stack_end)-1 // assign here the lower border of the addressrange occupied by your stack
&magicPattern=0xCCCCCCCC // any 32-bit you like which appears unlikely on the used part of the stack
Data.Set &lowAddr--&highAddr %Long &magicPattern // initialize the stack
Secondly create a script (stackcheck.cmm) to check the stack usage like this:
PRIVATE &lowAddr &highAddr &pattern &addr
ENTRY &lowAddr &highAddr &pattern
IF ("&lowAddr"=="")||("&highAddr"=="")||("&pattern "=="")
(
PRINT %ERROR "At least one of the 3 required parameters is missing"
ENDDO
)
VAR.NEWGLOBAL int \stacksize=0
VAR.NEWGLOBAL int \stackusage=0
&addr=&lowAddr
WHILE (Data.LONG(D:&addr)==&pattern)&&(&addr<&highAddr)
&addr=&addr+4
Var.Set %SPaces \stacksize = (&highAddr - &lowAddr) + 1
Var.Set %SPaces \stackusage = (&highAddr - &addr) + 1
Var.View \stacksize \stackusage (100*\stackusage)/\stacksize // Show result
ENDDO
(You might want to optimize the way to search through the address-range of the stack.)
Finally call the script to detect the current stack usage like this:
DO stackcheck.cmm &lowAddr &highAddr &magicPattern
If you want to check the stack-usage pretty often you might want to use MENU.AddTool to create a button for this in the tool-bar of TRACE32.

Related

Is it valid to write below ESP?

For a 32-bit windows application is it valid to use stack memory below ESP for temporary swap space without explicitly decrementing ESP?
Consider a function that returns a floating point value in ST(0). If our value is currently in EAX we would, for example,
PUSH EAX
FLD [ESP]
ADD ESP,4 // or POP EAX, etc
// return...
Or without modifying the ESP register, we could just :
MOV [ESP-4], EAX
FLD [ESP-4]
// return...
In both cases the same thing happens except that in the first case we take care to decrement the stack pointer before using the memory, and then to increment it afterwards. In the latter case we do not.
Notwithstanding any real need to persist this value on the stack (reentrancy issues, function calls between PUSHing and reading the value back, etc) is there any fundamental reason why writing to the stack below ESP like this would be invalid?
TL:DR: no, there are some SEH corner cases that can make it unsafe in practice, as well as being documented as unsafe. #Raymond Chen recently wrote a blog post that you should probably read instead of this answer.
His example of a code-fetch page-fault I/O error that can be "fixed" by prompting the user to insert a CD-ROM and retry is also my conclusion for the only practically-recoverable fault if there aren't any other possibly-faulting instructions between store and reload below ESP/RSP.
Or if you ask a debugger to call a function in the program being debugged, it will also use the target process's stack.
This answer has a list of some things you'd think would potentially step on memory below ESP, but actually don't, which might be interesting. It seems to be only SEH and debuggers that can be a problem in practice.
First of all, if you care about efficiency, can't you avoid x87 in your calling convention? movd xmm0, eax is a more efficient way to return a float that was in an integer register. (And you can often avoid moving FP values to integer registers in the first place, using SSE2 integer instructions to pick apart exponent / mantissa for a log(x), or integer add 1 for nextafter(x).) But if you need to support very old hardware, then you need a 32-bit x87 version of your program as well as an efficient 64-bit version.
But there are other use-cases for small amounts of scratch space on the stack where it would be nice to save a couple instructions that offset ESP/RSP.
Trying to collect up the combined wisdom of other answers and discussion in comments under them (and on this answer):
It is explicitly documented as being not safe by Microsoft: (for 64-bit code, I didn't find an equivalent statement for 32-bit code but I'm sure there is one)
Stack Usage (for x64)
All memory beyond the current address of RSP is considered volatile: The OS, or a debugger, may overwrite this memory during a user debug session, or an interrupt handler.
So that's the documentation, but the interrupt reason stated doesn't make sense for the user-space stack, only the kernel stack. The important part is that they document it as not guaranteed safe, not the reasons given.
Hardware interrupts can't use the user stack; that would let user-space crash the kernel with mov esp, 0, or worse take over the kernel by having another thread in the user-space process modify return addresses while an interrupt handler was running. This is why kernels always configure things so interrupt context is pushed onto the kernel stack.
Modern debuggers run in a separate process, and are not "intrusive". Back in 16-bit DOS days, without a multi-tasking protected-memory OS to give each task its own address space, debuggers would use the same stack as the program being debugged, between any two instructions while single-stepping.
#RossRidge points out that a debugger might want to let you call a function in the context of the current thread, e.g. with SetThreadContext. This would run with ESP/RSP just below the current value. This could obviously have side-effects for the process being debugged (intentional on the part of the user running the debugger), but clobbering local variables of the current function below ESP/RSP would be an undesirable and unexpected side-effect. (So compilers can't put them there.)
(In a calling convention with a red-zone below ESP/RSP, a debugger could respect that red-zone by decrementing ESP/RSP before making the function call.)
There are existing program that intentionally break when being debugged at all, and consider this a feature (to defend against efforts to reverse-engineer them).
Related: the x86-64 System V ABI (Linux, OS X, all other non-Windows systems) does define a red-zone for user-space code (64-bit only): 128 bytes below RSP that is guaranteed not to be asynchronously clobbered. Unix signal handlers can run asynchronously between any two user-space instructions, but the kernel respects the red-zone by leaving a 128 byte gap below the old user-space RSP, in case it was in use. With no signal handlers installed, you have an effectively unlimited red-zone even in 32-bit mode (where the ABI does not guarantee a red-zone). Compiler-generated code, or library code, of course can't assume that nothing else in the whole program (or in a library the program called) has installed a signal handler.
So the question becomes: is there anything on Windows that can asynchronously run code using the user-space stack between two arbitrary instructions? (i.e. any equivalent to a Unix signal handler.)
As far as we can tell, SEH (Structured Exception Handling) is the only real obstacle to what you propose for user-space code on current 32 and 64-bit Windows. (But future Windows could include a new feature.)
And I guess debugging if you happen ask your debugger to call a function in the target process/thread as mentioned above.
In this specific case, not touching any other memory other than the stack, or doing anything else that could fault, it's probably safe even from SEH.
SEH (Structured Exception Handling) lets user-space software have hardware exceptions like divide by zero delivered somewhat similarly to C++ exceptions. These are not truly asynchronous: they're for exceptions triggered by instructions you ran, not for events that happened to come after some random instruction.
But unlike normal exceptions, one thing a SEH handler can do is resume from where the exception occurred. (#RossRidge commented: SEH handlers are are initially called in the context of the unwound stack and can choose to ignore the exception and continue executing at the point where the exception occurred.)
So that's a problem even if there's no catch() clause in the current function.
Normally HW exceptions can only be triggered synchronously. e.g. by a div instruction, or by a memory access which could fault with STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION (the Windows equivalent of a Linux SIGSEGV segmentation fault). You control what instructions you use, so you can avoid instructions that might fault.
If you limit your code to only accessing stack memory between the store and reload, and you respect the stack-growth guard page, your program won't fault from accessing [esp-4]. (Unless you reached the max stack size (Stack Overflow), in which case push eax would fault, too, and you can't really recover from this situation because there's no stack space for SEH to use.)
So we can rule out STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION as a problem, because if we get that on accessing stack memory we're hosed anyway.
An SEH handler for STATUS_IN_PAGE_ERROR could run before any load instruction. Windows can page out any page it wants to, and transparently page it back in if it's needed again (virtual memory paging). But if there's an I/O error, your Windows attempts to let your process handle the failure by delivering a STATUS_IN_PAGE_ERROR
Again, if that happens to the current stack, we're hosed.
But code-fetch could cause STATUS_IN_PAGE_ERROR, and you could plausibly recover from that. But not by resuming execution at the place where the exception occurred (unless we can somehow remap that page to another copy in a highly fault-tolerant system??), so we might still be ok here.
An I/O error paging in the code that wants to read what we stored below ESP rules out any chance of reading it. If you weren't planning to do that anyway, you're fine. A generic SEH handler that doesn't know about this specific piece of code wouldn't be trying to do that anyway. I think usually a STATUS_IN_PAGE_ERROR would at most try to print an error message or maybe log something, not try to carry on whatever computation was happening.
Accessing other memory in between the store and reload to memory below ESP could trigger a STATUS_IN_PAGE_ERROR for that memory. In library code, you probably can't assume that some other pointer you passed isn't going to be weird and the caller is expecting to handle STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION or PAGE_ERROR for it.
Current compilers don't take advantage of space below ESP/RSP on Windows, even though they do take advantage of the red-zone in x86-64 System V (in leaf functions that need to spill / reload something, exactly like what you're doing for int -> x87.) That's because MS says it isn't safe, and they don't know whether SEH handlers exist that could try to resume after an SEH.
Things that you'd think might be a problem in current Windows, and why they're not:
The guard page stuff below ESP: as long as you don't go too far below the current ESP, you'll be touching the guard page and trigger allocation of more stack space instead of faulting. This is fine as long as the kernel doesn't check user-space ESP and find out that you're touching stack space without having "reserved" it first.
kernel reclaim of pages below ESP/RSP: apparently Windows doesn't currently do this. So using a lot of stack space once ever will keep those pages allocated for the rest of your process lifetime, unless you manually VirtualAlloc(MEM_RESET) them. (The kernel would be allowed to do this, though, because the docs say memory below RSP is volatile. The kernel could effectively zero it asynchronously if it wants to, copy-on-write mapping it to a zero page instead of writing it to the pagefile under memory pressure.)
APC (Asynchronous Procedure Calls): They can only be delivered when the process is in an "alertable state", which means only when inside a call to a function like SleepEx(0,1). calling a function already uses an unknown amount of space below E/RSP, so you already have to assume that every call clobbers everything below the stack pointer. Thus these "async" callbacks are not truly asynchronous with respect to normal execution the way Unix signal handlers are. (fun fact: POSIX async io does use signal handlers to run callbacks).
Console-application callbacks for ctrl-C and other events (SetConsoleCtrlHandler). This looks exactly like registering a Unix signal handler, but in Windows the handler runs in a separate thread with its own stack. (See RbMm's comment)
SetThreadContext: another thread could change our EIP/RIP asynchronously while this thread is suspended, but the whole program has to be written specially for that to make any sense. Unless it's a debugger using it. Correctness is normally not required when some other thread is messing around with your EIP unless the circumstances are very controlled.
And apparently there are no other ways that another process (or something this thread registered) can trigger execution of anything asynchronously with respect to the execution of user-space code on Windows.
If there are no SEH handlers that could try to resume, Windows more or less has a 4096 byte red-zone below ESP (or maybe more if you touch it incrementally?), but RbMm says nobody takes advantage of it in practice. This is unsurprising because MS says not to, and you can't always know if your callers might have done something with SEH.
Obviously anything that would synchronously clobber it (like a call) must also be avoided, again same as when using the red-zone in the x86-64 System V calling convention. (See https://stackoverflow.com/tags/red-zone/info for more about it.)
in general case (x86/x64 platform) - interrupt can be executed at any time, which overwrite memory bellow stack pointer (if it executed on current stack). because this, even temporary save something bellow stack pointer, not valid in kernel mode - interrupt will be use current kernel stack. but in user mode situation another - windows build interrupt table (IDT) suchwise that when interrupt raised - it will be always executed in kernel mode and in kernel stack. as result user mode stack (below stack pointer) will be not affected. and possible temporary use some stack space bellow it pointer, until you not do any functions calls. if exception will be (say by access invalid address) - also space bellow stack pointer will be overwritten - cpu exception of course begin executed in kernel mode and kernel stack, but than kernel execute callback in user space via ntdll.KiDispatchExecption already on current stack space. so in general this is valid in windows user mode (in current implementation), but you need good understand what you doing. however this is very rarely i think used
of course, how correct noted in comments that we can, in windows user mode, write below stack pointer - is just the current implementation behavior. this not documented or guaranteed.
but this is very fundamental - unlikely will be changed: interrupts always will be executed in privileged kernel mode only. and kernel mode will be use only kernel mode stack. the user mode context not trusted at all. what will be if user mode program set incorrect stack pointer ? say by
mov rsp,1 or mov esp,1 ? and just after this instruction interrupt will be raised. what will be if it begin executed on such invalid esp/rsp ? all operation system just crashed. exactly because this interrupt will be executed only on kernel stack. and not overwrite user stack space.
also need note that stack is limited space (even in user mode), access it bellow 1 page (4Kb)already error (need do stack probing page by page, for move guard page down).
and finally really there is no need usually access [ESP-4], EAX - in what problem decrement ESP first ? even if we need access stack space in loop huge count of time - decrement stack pointer need only once - 1 additional instruction (not in loop) nothing change in performance or code size.
so despite formal this is will be correct work in windows user mode, better (and not need) use this
of course formal documentation say:
Stack Usage
All memory beyond the current address of RSP is considered volatile
but this is for common case, including kernel mode too. i wrote about user mode and based on current implementation
possible in future windows and add "direct" apc or some "direct" signals - some code will be executed via callback just after thread enter to kernel (during usual hardware interrupt). after this all below esp will be undefined. but until this not exist. until this code will be work always(in current builds) correct.
In general (not specifically related to any OS); it's not safe to write below ESP if:
It's possible for the code to be interrupted and the interrupt handler will run at the same privilege level. Note: This is typically very unlikely for "user-space" code, but extremely likely for kernel code.
You call any other code (where either the call or the stack used by the called routine can trash the data you stored below ESP)
Something else depends on "normal" stack use. This can include signal handling, (language based) exception unwinding, debuggers, "stack smashing protector"
It's safe to write below ESP if it's not "not safe".
Note that for 64-bit code, writing below RSP is built into the x86-64 ABI ("red zone"); and is made safe by support for it in tool chains/compilers and everything else.
When a thread gets created, Windows reserves a contiguous region of virtual memory of a configurable size (the default is 1 MB) for the thread's stack. Initially, the stack looks like this (the stack grows downwards):
--------------
| committed |
--------------
| guard page |
--------------
| . |
| reserved |
| . |
| . |
| |
--------------
ESP will be pointing somewhere inside the committed page. The guard page is used to support automatic stack growth. The reserved pages region ensures that the requested stack size is available in virtual memory.
Consider the two instructions from the question:
MOV [ESP-4], EAX
FLD [ESP-4]
There are three possibilities:
The first instruction executes successfully. There is nothing that uses the user-mode stack that can execute between the two instructions. So the second instruction will use the correct value (#RbMm stated this in the comments under his answer and I agree).
The first instruction raises an exception and an exception handler does not return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION. As long as the second instruction is immediately after the first one (it is not in the exception handler or placed after it), then the second instruction will not execute. So you're still safe. Execution continues from stack frame where the exception handler exists.
The first instruction raises an exception and an exception handler returns EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION. Execution continues from the same instruction that raised the exception (potentially with a context modified by the handler). In this particular example, the first will be re-executed to write a value below ESP. No problem. If the second instruction raised an exception or there are more than two instructions, then the exception might occur a place after a value is written below ESP. When the exception handler gets called, it may overwrite the value and then return EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION. But when execution resumes, the value written is assumed to still be there, but it's not anymore. This is a situation where it's not safe to write below ESP. This applies even if all of the instructions are placed consecutively. Thanks to #RaymondChen for pointing this out.
In general, if the two instructions are not placed back-to-back, if you are writing to locations beyond ESP, there is no guarantee that the written values won't get corrupted or overwritten. One case that I can think of where this might happen is structured exception handling (SEH). If a hardware-defined exception (such as divide by zero) occurs, the kernel exception handler will be invoked (KiUserExceptionDispatcher) in kernel-mode, which will invoke the user-mode side of the handler (RtlDispatchException). When switching from user-mode to kernel-mode and then back to user-mode, whatever value was in ESP will be saved and restored. However, the user-mode handler itself uses the user-mode stack and will iterate over a registered list of exception handlers, each of which uses the user-mode stack. These functions will modify ESP as required. This may lead to losing the values you've written beyond ESP. A similar situation occurs when using software-define exceptions (throw in VC++).
I think you can deal with this by registering your own exception handler before any other exception handlers (so that it is called first). When your handler gets called, you can save your data beyond ESP elsewhere. Later, during unwinding, you get the cleanup opportunity to restore your data to the same location (or any other location) on the stack.
You need also to similarly watch out for asynchronous procedure calls (APCs) and callbacks.
Several answers here mention APCs (Asynchronous Procedure Calls), saying that they can only be delivered when the process is in an "alertable state", and are not truly asynchronous with respect to normal execution the way Unix signal handlers are
Windows 10 version 1809 introduces Special User APCs, which can fire at any moment just like Unix signals. See this article for low level details.
The Special User APC is a mechanism that was added in RS5 (and exposed through NtQueueApcThreadEx), but lately (in an insider build) was exposed through a new syscall - NtQueueApcThreadEx2. If this type of APC is used, the thread is signaled in the middle of the execution to execute the special APC.

How Kernel stack is used in case of different processor mode in ARM architecture?

As I understand every process have a user stack and kernel stack. Apart from that there is a stack for every mode in ARM achitecture. So I want to know How different stack and stack pointer works in ARM modes? Also when this kernel stack associated with the process will be used ?
... when this kernel stack associated with the process will be used ?
When you make a system call. Like you want to get IP address of an interface, kernel just like any other application needs some stack to prepare what you want. So it has a corresponding stack when you switch to kernel side of a system call.
How different stack and stack pointer works in ARM modes?
ARM defines a few hardware modes to handle different inputs to the system. For example out of nowhere you can execute an illegal instruction (or undefined). In this case execution in CPU goes into a different mode and needs to be told how to proceed. Since most of the time you require some stack space to be able to handle this gracefully you need a separate stack for this mode. ARM provides you different stack register so when you switch to a different HW mode you don't overwrite previous modes stack pointer.
The kernel stack is not associated with any particular process it is used by kernel to keep track of its own functions and the system calls which are invoked by processes.since system call handles kernel data structures its stack can not be maintained on process stack since then process can access private data strucutres of kernel which is harmful to kernel.

Call stack questions

I have been reading up on the call stack lately. However all examples and articles I have been reading has been single threaded. I am interested in how the call stack looks like in memory and how we can analyse it.
Sorry for including so many questions in one post. But it seems messy to create one post for each question when they are all related.
My questions here are for Windows x86.
So the questions I am having difficulty with is:
Is there always one call stack for each thread in a process? Ie, threads do not share call stacks?
Is the size of each call stack fixed? Or can it be different for each thread?
Let's pretend that we are doing everything ourselves and write our program in assembly. Is the call stack magically given to us? Or do we have to implement it ourselves?
If we make our program in assembly, do we then reserve some memory and set the call stack memory start address to ESP in order to set it up?
-Michael
1) Each thread has its own stack - almost by definition.
2) Maximum stack size is a process limit, specified in header. Initial thread stack size is a thread creation parameter - see CreateThread() API.
3) The OS manages all memory. The stack for new threads is dynamically allocated by the kernel upon thread creation and the top of the stack filled in with a stack frame that, amongst other stuff, allows the thread to begin execution by popping the frame in a similar manner to an interrupt-return. Don't try to do this at home.
4) NO! Import and call the CreateThread() API.

need explanation on why does EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION occur

Hi I know that this error which I'm going to show can't be fixed through code. I just want to know why and how is it caused and I also know its due to JVM trying to access address space of another program.
A fatal error has been detected by the Java Runtime Environment:
EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION (0xc0000005) at pc=0x6dcd422a, pid=4024, tid=3900
JRE version: 6.0_14-b08
Java VM: Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM (14.0-b16 mixed mode windows-x86 )
Problematic frame:
V [jvm.dll+0x17422a]
An error report file with more information is saved as:
C:\PServer\server\bin\hs_err_pid4024.log
If you would like to submit a bug report, please visit:
http://java.sun.com/webapps/bugreport/crash.jsp
The book "modern operating systems" from Tanenbaum, which is available online here:
http://lovingod.host.sk/tanenbaum/Unix-Linux-Windows.html
Covers the topic in depth. (Chapter 4 is in Memory Management and Chapter 4.8 is on Memory segmentation). The short version:
It would be very bad if several programs on your PC could access each other's memory. Actually even within one program, even in one thread you have multiple areas of memory that must not influence one other. Usually a process has at least one memory area called the "stack" and one area called the "heap" (commonly every process has one heap + one stack per thread. There MAY be more segments, but this is implementation dependent and it does not matter for the explanation here). On the stack things like you function's arguments and your local variables are saved. On the heap are variables saved that's size and lifetime cannot be determined by the compiler at compile time (that would be in Java everything that you use the "new"-Operator on. Example:
public void bar(String hi, int myInt)
{
String foo = new String("foobar");
}
in this example are two String objects: (referenced by "foo" and "hi"). Both these objects are on the heap (you know this, because at some point both Strings were allocated using "new". And in this example 3 values are on the stack. This would be the value of "myInt", "hi" and "foo". It is important to realize that "hi" and "foo" don't really contain Strings directly, but instead they contain some id that tells them were on the heap they can find the String. (This is not as easy to explain using java because java abstracts a lot. In C "hi" and "foo" would be a Pointer which is actually just an integer which represents the address in the heap where the actual value is stored).
You might ask yourself why there is a stack and a heap anyway. Why not put everything in the same place. Explaining that unfortunately exceeds the scope of this answer. Read the book I linked ;-). The short version is that stack and heap are differently managed and the separation is done for reasons of optimization.
The size of stack and heap are limited. (On Linux execute ulimit -a and you'll get a list including "data seg size" (heap) and "stack size" (yeah... stack :-)).).
The stack is something that just grows. Like an array that gets bigger and bigger if you append more and more data. Eventually you run out of space. In this case you may end up writing in the memory area that does not belong to you anymore. And that would be extremely bad. So the operating systems notices that and stops the program if that happens. On Linux you get a "Segmenation fault" and on Windows you get an "Access violation".
In other languages like in C, you need to manage your memory manually. A tiny error can easily cause you to accidentally write into some space that does not belong to you. In Java you have "automatic memory management" which means that the JVM does all this for you. You don't need to care and that takes loads from your shoulders as a developer (it usually does. I bet there are people out there who would disagree about the "loads" part ;-)). This means that it /should/ be impossible to produce segmentation faults with java. Unfortunatelly the JVM is not perfect. Sometimes it has bugs and screws up. And then you get what you got.

Can address space be recycled for multiple calls to MapViewOfFileEx without chance of failure?

Consider a complex, memory hungry, multi threaded application running within a 32bit address space on windows XP.
Certain operations require n large buffers of fixed size, where only one buffer needs to be accessed at a time.
The application uses a pattern where some address space the size of one buffer is reserved early and is used to contain the currently needed buffer.
This follows the sequence:
(initial run) VirtualAlloc -> VirtualFree -> MapViewOfFileEx
(buffer changes) UnMapViewOfFile -> MapViewOfFileEx
Here the pointer to the buffer location is provided by the call to VirtualAlloc and then that same location is used on each call to MapViewOfFileEx.
The problem is that windows does not (as far as I know) provide any handshake type operation for passing the memory space between the different users.
Therefore there is a small opportunity (at each -> in my above sequence) where the memory is not locked and another thread can jump in and perform an allocation within the buffer.
The next call to MapViewOfFileEx is broken and the system can no longer guarantee that there will be a big enough space in the address space for a buffer.
Obviously refactoring to use smaller buffers reduces the rate of failures to reallocate space.
Some use of HeapLock has had some success but this still has issues - something still manages to steal some memory from within the address space.
(We tried Calling GetProcessHeaps then using HeapLock to lock all of the heaps)
What I'd like to know is there anyway to lock a specific block of address space that is compatible with MapViewOfFileEx?
Edit: I should add that ultimately this code lives in a library that gets called by an application outside of my control
You could brute force it; suspend every thread in the process that isn't the one performing the mapping, Unmap/Remap, unsuspend the suspended threads. It ain't elegant, but it's the only way I can think of off-hand to provide the kind of mutual exclusion you need.
Have you looked at creating your own private heap via HeapCreate? You could set the heap to your desired buffer size. The only remaining problem is then how to get MapViewOfFileto use your private heap instead of the default heap.
I'd assume that MapViewOfFile internally calls GetProcessHeap to get the default heap and then it requests a contiguous block of memory. You can surround the call to MapViewOfFile with a detour, i.e., you rewire the GetProcessHeap call by overwriting the method in memory effectively inserting a jump to your own code which can return your private heap.
Microsoft has published the Detour Library that I'm not directly familiar with however. I know that detouring is surprisingly common. Security software, virus scanners etc all use such frameworks. It's not pretty, but may work:
HANDLE g_hndPrivateHeap;
HANDLE WINAPI GetProcessHeapImpl() {
return g_hndPrivateHeap;
}
struct SDetourGetProcessHeap { // object for exception safety
SDetourGetProcessHeap() {
// put detour in place
}
~SDetourGetProcessHeap() {
// remove detour again
}
};
void MapFile() {
g_hndPrivateHeap = HeapCreate( ... );
{
SDetourGetProcessHeap d;
MapViewOfFile(...);
}
}
These may also help:
How to replace WinAPI functions calls in the MS VC++ project with my own implementation (name and parameters set are the same)?
How can I hook Windows functions in C/C++?
http://research.microsoft.com/pubs/68568/huntusenixnt99.pdf
Imagine if I came to you with a piece of code like this:
void *foo;
foo = malloc(n);
if (foo)
free(foo);
foo = malloc(n);
Then I came to you and said, help! foo does not have the same address on the second allocation!
I'd be crazy, right?
It seems to me like you've already demonstrated clear knowledge of why this doesn't work. There's a reason that the documention for any API that takes an explicit address to map into lets you know that the address is just a suggestion, and it can't be guaranteed. This also goes for mmap() on POSIX.
I would suggest you write the program in such a way that a change in address doesn't matter. That is, don't store too many pointers to quantities inside the buffer, or if you do, patch them up after reallocation. Similar to the way you'd treat a buffer that you were going to pass into realloc().
Even the documentation for MapViewOfFileEx() explicitly suggests this:
While it is possible to specify an address that is safe now (not used by the operating system), there is no guarantee that the address will remain safe over time. Therefore, it is better to let the operating system choose the address. In this case, you would not store pointers in the memory mapped file, you would store offsets from the base of the file mapping so that the mapping can be used at any address.
Update from your comments
In that case, I suppose you could:
Not map into contiguous blocks. Perhaps you could map in chunks and write some intermediate function to decide which to read from/write to?
Try porting to 64 bit.
As the earlier post suggests, you can suspend every thread in the process while you change the memory mappings. You can use SuspendThread()/ResumeThread() for that. This has the disadvantage that your code has to know about all the other threads and hold thread handles for them.
An alternative is to use the Windows debug API to suspend all threads. If a process has a debugger attached, then every time the process faults, Windows will suspend all of the process's threads until the debugger handles the fault and resumes the process.
Also see this question which is very similar, but phrased differently:
Replacing memory mappings atomically on Windows

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