This is driving me wild with frustration. I am just trying to create a shared memory buffer class that uses in shared memory created through Boost.Interprocess where I can read/store data. I wrote the following to test the functionality
#include <boost/interprocess/shared_memory_object.hpp>
#include <boost/interprocess/mapped_region.hpp>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost::interprocess;
int main( int argc, char* argv[] ) {
shared_memory_object::remove( "MyName" );
// Create a shared memory object
shared_memory_object shm ( create_only, "MyName", read_write );
// Set size for the shared memory region
shm.truncate(1000);
// Map the whole shared memory in this process
mapped_region region(shm, read_write);
// Get pointer to the beginning of the mapped shared memory region
int* start_ptr;
start_ptr = static_cast<int*>(region.get_address());
// Write data into the buffer
int* write_ptr = start_ptr;
for( int i= 0; i<10; i++ ) {
cout << "Write data: " << i << endl;
开发者_如何学Pythonmemcpy( write_ptr, &i, sizeof(int) );
write_ptr++;
}
// Read data from the buffer
int* read_ptr = start_ptr;
int* data;
for( int i= 0; i<10; i++ ) {
memcpy( data, read_ptr, sizeof(int) );
cout << "Read data: " << *data << endl;
read_ptr++;
}
shared_memory_object::remove( "MyName" );
return 0;
}
When I run this, it writes the data OK, but segfaults on the first memcpy
in the read loop. gdb says the following:
Program received signal EXC_BAD_ACCESS, Could not access memory. Reason: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at address: 0x0000000000000000 0x00007fffffe007c5 in __memcpy ()
(gdb) where
#0 0x00007fffffe007c5 in __memcpy () #1 0x0000000100000e45 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7fff5fbff9d0) at try.cpp:36
The functionality is so simple, I don't know what I'm missing. Any help will be much appreciated.
data
isn't being set to point at anything. (Make sure the program is being compiled with all warnings enabled.) It looks like it shouldn't be a pointer anyway.
The second loop should perhaps be:
int* read_ptr = start_ptr;
int data;
for( int i= 0; i<10; i++ ) {
memcpy( &data, read_ptr, sizeof(int) );
cout << "Read data: " << data << endl;
read_ptr++;
}
I can't test it here because I don't have boost
available but I a have guess. In this example,
the shared_memory_object
object is first used to write with a flag create_only
.
shared_memory_object shm (create_only, "MySharedMemory", read_write);
Then it is read with a second shared_memory_object
object with a flag open_only
:
shared_memory_object shm (open_only, "MySharedMemory", read_only);
It seems you have to change your shared_memory_object
to a proper flag.
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