It works when, in the loop, I set every element to 0 or to entry_count-1. It works when I set it up so that entry_count is small, and I write it by hand instead of by loop (sorted_order[0] = 0; sorted_order[1] = 1; ... etc).
Please do not tell me what to do to fix my code. I will not be using smart pointers or vectors for very specific reasons. Instead focus on the question: What sort of conditions can cause this segfault? Thank you.
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I am trying to debug code that isn't working on a unix machine. The gist of the code is:
int *sorted_array = (int*)memory;
// I know that this block is large enough
// It is allocated by malloc earlier
for (int i = 0; i < entry_count; ++i){
sorted_array[i] = i;
}
There appears to be a segfault somewhere in the loop. Switching to debug mode, unfortunately, makes the segfault stop. Using cout debugging I found that it must be in the loop.
Next I wanted to know how far into the loop the segfault happend so I added:
std::cout << i << '
';
It showed the entire range it was suppose to be looping over and there was no segfault.
With a little more experimentation I eventually created a string stream before the loop and write an empty string into it for each iteration of the loop and there is no segfault.
I tried some other assorted operations trying to figure out what is going on. I tried setting a variable j = i; and stuff like that, but I haven't found anything that works.
Running valgrind the only information I got on the segfault was that it was a "General Protection Fault" and something about default response to 11. It also mentions that there's a Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialized value(s), but looking at the code I can't figure out how that's possible.
What can this be? I am out of ideas to explore.
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