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Improve this questionI often write code that renders images by writing pixels directly into buffers and I often find it hard to get a good overview 开发者_如何学Pythonof what's really going on. The Memory window in Visual Studio's debugger is somewhat a help, but I'd really love to see the images graphically.
So my question is, does anyone know of a debugging extension that can read a chunk of memory as a picture in a specified pixel format and display it graphically?
Such a thing exists:
A utility for simple printf-style debugging of images in Win32 C/C++ applications.
http://billbaxter.com/projects/imdebug/
My coworker raves about it.
--chris
A colleague of mine wrote this CodeProject article for writing Debugger Visualizers
http://www.codeproject.com/KB/showcase/BuildDebuggerVisualizer.aspx
It uses our product, a .NET imaging toolkit, but it could easily be adapted to use .NET image classes instead.
What you're asking for is not naturally achieveable in native c++. All the visualization technology inside the visual debugger is organized around the CLR, hence either C# or C++/CLI.
The one thing that can help in native land is the expression evaluator addin mechanism. Of course, it's designed to return a string and go away, but it's code, so you could in theory run any code, including displaying a window and showing the data you care about (after having read it from the debuggee).
It's a bit of a bummer to see those great features missing from the native side, though.
I'm developing a open source Add-In, Visual Image Assist, for VC6/7/8/9 used to show/edit a image. It may be you want, too.
- Create a class containing your buffer + metadata (width, height, stride, pixelformat).
- Add ToStream() and FromStream() methods to your class for (de)serializing image (buffer and metadata).
- Add a ToWpfBitmapSource() to your class.
- Create a debug visualizer that deserializes your image from the stream, converts to WPF's BitmapSource, places in an Image control, within a Winforms WPF host.
This example will help: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/WPF/WPF_Glimps.aspx
The class can be added in C++ CLI in a seperate DLL.
I've scrapped my old answer since it was irrelevant. The new on also used OpenCV (since I'm trying to display an OpenCV image) but it can be adapted to any framework.
The core code is where it takes a memory address address
, and the number of bytes to read through numrows
, numcols
, and byte_size
and reads those bytes into a buffer. I'm sure you can adapt that portion of the code for your own needs.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <windows.h>
#include <cv.h>
#include <highgui.h>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
using namespace cv;
void imshow_debug(const LPCVOID address, const int numrows, const int numcols, const int type, const int byte_size, const int step, const string windows_title)
{
// Initialize
unsigned long PID;
SIZE_T read_bytes = 0;
// Allocate space for the image
const int bytes_to_read = numrows*numcols*byte_size;
uchar *image_data = new uchar[bytes_to_read];
Mat Image(numrows,numcols,type,image_data,step);
// Get the handle and PID
HWND handle = FindWindowA(0, windows_title.c_str());
if (!FindWindowA(0, windows_title.c_str()))
{
printf("Window %s not found!", windows_title);
exit(0);
}
GetWindowThreadProcessId(handle, &PID); /* Get windows PID from a window handle */
HANDLE WindowsProcessHandle = OpenProcess(PROCESS_ALL_ACCESS, false, PID);
// Read the image
ReadProcessMemory(WindowsProcessHandle,address,image_data,bytes_to_read,&read_bytes);
if(bytes_to_read != read_bytes)
{
cout<<"Could not read entire image"<<endl;
exit(0);
}
// Display the image
namedWindow("Image");
imshow("Image",Image);
waitKey();
// Clean up
CloseHandle(WindowsProcessHandle);
delete[]image_data;
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
imshow_debug((LPVOID)0x03af0370,300,300,CV_64F,sizeof(double),2400,"C:\\Documents and Settings\\jacobm\\My Documents\\Visual Studio 2005\\Projects\\Head\\debug\\SSR_VideoComp.exe");
return 0;
}
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