Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
  • Search
  • Get Qt Extensions
  • Unsolved
Collapse
Brand Logo
  1. Home
  2. Qt Development
  3. General and Desktop
  4. QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault
Forum Updated to NodeBB v4.3 + New Features

QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Unsolved General and Desktop
15 Posts 7 Posters 1.9k Views 2 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mchinand
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    You've created a vector with no elements, so it's going to crash when you try to write to a non-existent 4th element.

    P 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • M mchinand

      You've created a vector with no elements, so it's going to crash when you try to write to a non-existent 4th element.

      P Offline
      P Offline
      Publicnamer
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      @mchinand Another variant of this code that also crashes is:

      mystruct *v = new mystruct[100];
      v[3].s = "abc";
      v[3].i = 123;
      
      M 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • P Publicnamer

        @mchinand Another variant of this code that also crashes is:

        mystruct *v = new mystruct[100];
        v[3].s = "abc";
        v[3].i = 123;
        
        M Offline
        M Offline
        mpergand
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

        @mchinand Another variant of this code that also crashes is:

        mystruct *v = new mystruct[100];
        v[3].s = "abc";
        v[3].i = 123;
        

        No, it doesn't.

        With QVector you can do:

        QVector<mystruct> v(10,{"aa",100});
        qDebug()<<v[5].s<<v[3].s;
        
        P 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • M mpergand

          @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

          @mchinand Another variant of this code that also crashes is:

          mystruct *v = new mystruct[100];
          v[3].s = "abc";
          v[3].i = 123;
          

          No, it doesn't.

          With QVector you can do:

          QVector<mystruct> v(10,{"aa",100});
          qDebug()<<v[5].s<<v[3].s;
          
          P Offline
          P Offline
          Publicnamer
          wrote on last edited by Publicnamer
          #5

          @mpergand
          It really does crash for me compiling with G++ and with clang.

          0x0000007ff6fd8fc0 in QString::operator=(QString const&) () from /usr/lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5
          

          It also crashes if I assign the QString like so:

          QString otherString = "xyz";
          std::string str = otherString.toString();
          const char *cstr = str.c_str();
          v[3].s = QString(cstr);
          

          As well as:

          v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error
          

          My struct has many elements. It makes no sense to init it using a single-line expresson.

          JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • P Publicnamer

            @mpergand
            It really does crash for me compiling with G++ and with clang.

            0x0000007ff6fd8fc0 in QString::operator=(QString const&) () from /usr/lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5
            

            It also crashes if I assign the QString like so:

            QString otherString = "xyz";
            std::string str = otherString.toString();
            const char *cstr = str.c_str();
            v[3].s = QString(cstr);
            

            As well as:

            v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error
            

            My struct has many elements. It makes no sense to init it using a single-line expresson.

            JonBJ Online
            JonBJ Online
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            @Publicnamer
            Instead of stating that your code is correct and the C++ optimizer is wrong, show your code for others to be the judge.

            There are a lot of programs out there, Qt or otherwise, using compiler optimization flags. If that regularly caused crashes there would be an uproar. Do you know better than the people who wrote the compilers?

            P 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • JonBJ JonB

              @Publicnamer
              Instead of stating that your code is correct and the C++ optimizer is wrong, show your code for others to be the judge.

              There are a lot of programs out there, Qt or otherwise, using compiler optimization flags. If that regularly caused crashes there would be an uproar. Do you know better than the people who wrote the compilers?

              P Offline
              P Offline
              Publicnamer
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              @JonB
              The code I'm showing is virtually identical to the real code. It really is crashing with these simple operations.

              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • M Offline
                M Offline
                mchinand
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                struct mystruct {
                QString s;
                int i;
                }

                Is your real code missing a semicolon at the end of this? I wouldn't think it would compile without it.

                struct mystruct {
                QString s;
                int i;
                };
                
                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • P Publicnamer

                  @JonB
                  The code I'm showing is virtually identical to the real code. It really is crashing with these simple operations.

                  JonBJ Online
                  JonBJ Online
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #9

                  @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                  The code I'm showing is virtually identical to the real code.

                  If I had a $ for every time somebody said "this code crashes, but it's not quite the same as my code, but it's really the same, honest", I'd be rich. After wasting my time on code which turns out to be different from what the person really has.

                  Be reasonable about what you want other people to comment on. That is, if you want to solve it.

                  Start by breaking your problem down.

                  • Remove the vector. Does, say, qDebug() << QString(cstr); crash? If yes it has nothing to do with the vector.

                  • If it is the vector situation only, look at your vector closely instead.

                  If you want anything done: Produce a minimal example which others can compile. Don't give us some code and say your actual code is something different.

                  Also, are you saying anything about how the code is compiled affecting the outcome? If you can reproduce the problem compiled for debug, let it crash in the debugger and show us the stack trace.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • P Publicnamer

                    @mpergand
                    It really does crash for me compiling with G++ and with clang.

                    0x0000007ff6fd8fc0 in QString::operator=(QString const&) () from /usr/lib/aarch64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5
                    

                    It also crashes if I assign the QString like so:

                    QString otherString = "xyz";
                    std::string str = otherString.toString();
                    const char *cstr = str.c_str();
                    v[3].s = QString(cstr);
                    

                    As well as:

                    v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error
                    

                    My struct has many elements. It makes no sense to init it using a single-line expresson.

                    JonBJ Online
                    JonBJ Online
                    JonB
                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                    #10

                    @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                    QString otherString = "xyz";
                    std::string str = otherString.toString();

                    This is part of your code which crashes? There is no method QString::toString(), so it would not even compile, so how can it crash? Do you see the point of producing an actual piece of code which exhbits your problem, rather than assuring us it is "virtually identical to the real code"?

                    P 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                      QString otherString = "xyz";
                      std::string str = otherString.toString();

                      This is part of your code which crashes? There is no method QString::toString(), so it would not even compile, so how can it crash? Do you see the point of producing an actual piece of code which exhbits your problem, rather than assuring us it is "virtually identical to the real code"?

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Publicnamer
                      wrote on last edited by Publicnamer
                      #11

                      @JonB Obviously I meant toStdString.
                      The problem seems to be that QString cannot be put into a struct for whatever reason. There is some crazy bug in that class.
                      The fact that I get a double free error when I using strdup is really alarming:

                      v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error here
                      
                      JonBJ JoeCFDJ W 3 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • P Publicnamer

                        @JonB Obviously I meant toStdString.
                        The problem seems to be that QString cannot be put into a struct for whatever reason. There is some crazy bug in that class.
                        The fact that I get a double free error when I using strdup is really alarming:

                        v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error here
                        
                        JonBJ Online
                        JonBJ Online
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #12

                        @Publicnamer
                        So you would like us to comment on why your code is crashing when we should guess what is "obviously" in your code? This is getting crazy.

                        If you want actual help with your issue, as opposed to telling us that everything is wrong and does not work, produce an actual example. People here will help.

                        The problem seems to be that QString cannot be put into a struct for whatever reason. There is some crazy bug in that class.

                        Simply not so.

                        Meanwhile I have asked you useful questions like: does it happen when compiling for debug? No answer. Does it crash when you do not use a vector? array? No answer.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • P Publicnamer

                          @JonB Obviously I meant toStdString.
                          The problem seems to be that QString cannot be put into a struct for whatever reason. There is some crazy bug in that class.
                          The fact that I get a double free error when I using strdup is really alarming:

                          v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error here
                          
                          JoeCFDJ Offline
                          JoeCFDJ Offline
                          JoeCFD
                          wrote on last edited by JoeCFD
                          #13

                          @Publicnamer struct is a class as well. How can it be possible that QString can not be put into struct? Your app may have some corrupt memory and the real problem may be somewhere else.
                          On linux, run valgrind to find out memory issue.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • P Publicnamer

                            @JonB Obviously I meant toStdString.
                            The problem seems to be that QString cannot be put into a struct for whatever reason. There is some crazy bug in that class.
                            The fact that I get a double free error when I using strdup is really alarming:

                            v[3].s = QString(strdup(cstr)); // double free error here
                            
                            W Offline
                            W Offline
                            wrosecrans
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                            @JonB Obviously I meant toStdString.

                            The thing is, nothing is "obvious" when debugging. You didn't mean to have a bug in the first place, so trying to make people guess about the code you are having problems with isn't productive. People can really only help you debug an actual reproducible test case, not just something "obviously" similar to a test case. Seriously, share a full main() with your actual problem, and people will be much more able to see what's happening.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • C Offline
                              C Offline
                              ChrisW67
                              wrote on last edited by ChrisW67
                              #15

                              @Publicnamer said in QString optimized out, causes segmentation fault:

                              Anyone know why this might happen?

                              It really does crash for me compiling with G++ and with clang.

                              Yes, the code presented in the original post will crash for exactly the reason described by @mchinand. The result almost certainly will not change with compiler or optimization level, but might be more informative if compiled for debug.

                              Here is your example, or something "virtually identical" to it:

                              #include <QCoreApplication>
                              #include <QString>
                              #include <QVector>
                              #include <QDebug>
                              
                              struct mystruct {
                                QString s;
                                int i;
                              };
                              
                              int main (int argc, char **argv) {
                                      QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                              
                                      qDebug() << "Starting";
                                      QVector<mystruct> v;  // <<<< this vector has no members
                                      v[3].s = "abc";
                                      v[3].i = 123;
                                      qDebug() << v[3].s << v[3].i;
                                              qDebug() << "Ending";
                                              qDebug() << "Ending";
                              
                                      return 0;
                              }
                              

                              Here is what happens when compiled for release (-O2 optimization, gcc version 9.3.0)

                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ qmake -v
                              QMake version 3.1
                              Using Qt version 5.12.8 in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ qmake CONFIG+=release
                              Info: creating stash file /tmp/crash/.qmake.stash
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ make
                              g++ -c -pipe -O2 -Wall -W -D_REENTRANT -fPIC -DQT_DEPRECATED_WARNINGS -DQT_NO_DEBUG -DQT_GUI_LIB -DQT_CORE_LIB -I. -I. -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5 -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtGui -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore -I. -I/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/mkspecs/linux-g++ -o main.o main.cpp
                              g++ -Wl,-O1 -o crash main.o   /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Gui.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libGL.so -lpthread   
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ ./crash 
                              Starting
                              Segmentation fault (core dumped)
                              

                              ... and for debug (no optimization at all, and debug symbols):

                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ make distclean
                              rm -f moc_predefs.h
                              rm -f main.o
                              rm -f *~ core *.core
                              rm -f crash 
                              rm -f .qmake.stash
                              rm -f Makefile
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ qmake CONFIG+=debug
                              Info: creating stash file /tmp/crash/.qmake.stash
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ make
                              g++ -c -pipe -g -Wall -W -D_REENTRANT -fPIC -DQT_DEPRECATED_WARNINGS -DQT_GUI_LIB -DQT_CORE_LIB -I. -I. -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5 -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtGui -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore -I. -I/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/mkspecs/linux-g++ -o main.o main.cpp
                              g++  -o crash main.o   /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Gui.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libGL.so -lpthread   
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ ./crash 
                              Starting
                              ASSERT failure in QVector<T>::operator[]: "index out of range", file /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore/qvector.h, line 437
                              Aborted (core dumped)
                              

                              With/without optimization, same result, ergo not optimization induced.
                              Debug version tells you exactly why it crashed, if only you looked.

                              gdb, on a debug version, will tell you which line of your code triggered it:

                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ gdb ./crash
                              GNU gdb (Ubuntu 9.2-0ubuntu1~20.04) 9.2
                              ...
                              Reading symbols from ./crash...
                              (gdb) run
                              Starting program: /tmp/crash/crash 
                              [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
                              Using host libthread_db library "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1".
                              Starting
                              ASSERT failure in QVector<T>::operator[]: "index out of range", file /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore/qvector.h, line 437
                              
                              Program received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
                              __GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:50
                              50      ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c: No such file or directory.
                              (gdb) bt
                              #0  __GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:50
                              #1  0x00007ffff7694859 in __GI_abort () at abort.c:79
                              #2  0x00007ffff7ae3aad in QMessageLogger::fatal(char const*, ...) const () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5
                              #3  0x00007ffff7ae2f46 in qt_assert_x(char const*, char const*, char const*, int) () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5
                              #4  0x0000555555555d85 in QVector<mystruct>::operator[] (this=0x7fffffffdf60, i=3) at /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore/qvector.h:437
                              #5  0x0000555555555453 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffe0b8) at main.cpp:16
                              (gdb) 
                              

                              If you correct your erroneous code to, for example:

                              #include <QCoreApplication>
                              #include <QString>
                              #include <QVector>
                              #include <QDebug>
                              
                              struct mystruct {
                                mystruct(): s(), i(0) { }  // <<<< a  constructor so the int is never undefined
                              
                                QString s;
                                int i;
                              };
                              
                              int main (int argc, char **argv) {
                                      QCoreApplication app(argc, argv);
                              
                                      qDebug() << "Starting";
                                      QVector<mystruct> v(4);  // <<<< this vector actually has 4 default constructed members
                                      v[3].s = "abc";
                                      v[3].i = 123;
                                      qDebug() << v[3].s << v[3].i;
                                      qDebug() << "Ending";
                                      
                                      return 0;
                              }
                              

                              Then, oddly, it does not crash:

                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ make
                              g++ -c -pipe -O2 -Wall -W -D_REENTRANT -fPIC -DQT_DEPRECATED_WARNINGS -DQT_NO_DEBUG -DQT_GUI_LIB -DQT_CORE_LIB -I. -I. -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5 -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtGui -isystem /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/QtCore -I. -I/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/mkspecs/linux-g++ -o main.o main.cpp
                              g++ -Wl,-O1 -o crash main.o   /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Gui.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libGL.so -lpthread   
                              chrisw@newton:/tmp/crash$ ./crash 
                              Starting
                              "abc" 123
                              Ending
                              
                              1 Reply Last reply
                              3

                              • Login

                              • Login or register to search.
                              • First post
                                Last post
                              0
                              • Categories
                              • Recent
                              • Tags
                              • Popular
                              • Users
                              • Groups
                              • Search
                              • Get Qt Extensions
                              • Unsolved