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(转)Microsoft Visual C++ Tips and Tricks

Posted on 2008-11-13 10:43 chefZ 阅读(1219) 评论(0)  编辑 收藏 引用

Microsoft Visual C++ Tips and Tricks

by Alan De Smet

If you're stuck using Microsoft Visual C++, these tips may help make the experience more pleasant. I've been collecting these little tidbits for a while, and decided to collect them in one spot. I've chosen to collect them here because I can't think of a better spot.

First thing, get yourself a copy of Workspace Whiz. Workspace Whiz gives you a nice GUI interface to Exhuberant CTAGS. It also gives you a handy button to switch between the header and source files. It's cheap ($10), and makes life better.

Next, get yourself a copy of STLFilt. It's completely free. It significantly cleans up the garbage error messages Visual C++ generates for STL code. (It does require Perl, but every developer should have Perl installed anyway. The easiest way to get Perl for Windows is ActiveState's free ActivePerl.

Whenever I refer to the "sharedide" directory, you'll need to change it to the appropriate directory. In Visual C++ 5, it's actually called "sharedide" under the directory where you installed VC. In Visual C++ 6, it's in the "Common\MSDev98" directory under the directory where you installed VC.

Show compile duration

Simply add '/Y3' to the command line of VC (In the short cut). You'll now get reports on how long a compile took in your Build window.

Update 2003-01-10: I haven't had a chance to use Visual Studio .NET yet, but I'm told that you can set this option with a switch under Options > Projects > Build.

Teach VC to intelligently expand classes/structs in debugger

Isn't it neat how VC's debugger knows how to intelligently expand CStrings, CPoints, POINTS, and alot of other stuff? Well, you can teach it to handle your own structs and classes. Just edit autoexp.dat in sharedide/bin (in the directory where Visual Studio is installed.) The format of that file is fairly complicated, so I suggest just copying the examples already in the file.

Add user defined keywords for syntax highlighting

Why can you set a color for user defined keywords in Tools > Options > Format? Where do you set the keywords? Easy, just create usertype.dat in the sharedide/bin directory that Visual Studio is installed in. Put your keywords in that file, one per line.

Custom Tip of the Day

Any files with the extension ".tip" in the sharedide/bin/ide directory where Visual Studio is installed will be read. You can delete the .tip files Microsoft provides and add your own. You might want to take a look at Microsoft's files to see the format. I personally suggest filling the .tip file with quotes, news, or something more useful and entertaining that the TotDs.

How to use .cc file extensions for C++

Make the following modifications to the registry:

<br>HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\DevStudio\6.0\Text<br>Editor\Tabs/Language Settings\C/C++<br>FileExtensions=cpp;cxx;c;h;hxx;hpp;inl;tlh;tli;rc;rc2;cc;cp<br>HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-1219703950-274334628-1532313055-1335\Software\Microsoft\DevStudio\6.0\Build<br>System\Components\Platforms\Win32 (x86)\Tools\32-bit C/C++ Compiler for<br>80x86 Input_Spec=*.c;*.cpp;*.cxx,*.cc,*.cp<br>HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-1219703950-274334628-1532313055-1335\Software\Microsoft\DevStudio\6.0\Build<br>System\Components\Tools\<Component 0x3><br>Input_Spec=*.c;*.cpp;*.cxx;*.cc;*.cp<br>

Add the flag "/Tp" to the compiler settings for the project.

Removing the "docking" capability from the menus

In Tools > Options..., in the Workspace tab, turn on "Use screen reader compatible menus". Your menus will lose the gripper (the double line on the left edge indicating dockability), and will stay nailed down like they should. Unfortunately this also removes the icons from the menus.

Useful build messages

The following macros make it easy to add reminders which are displayed when code is compiled. You can double click on a reminder in the Output Window and jump to the line. Useful for marking TODOs. (Originally from Windows Developer Journal, 1997?)

<br>// Statements like:<br>// #pragma message(Reminder "Fix this problem!")<br>// Which will cause messages like:<br>// C:\Source\Project\main.cpp(47): Reminder: Fix this problem!<br>// to show up during compiles. Note that you can NOT use the<br>// words "error" or "warning" in your reminders, since it will<br>// make the IDE think it should abort execution. You can double<br>// click on these messages and jump to the line in question.<br>#define Stringize( L ) #L<br>#define MakeString( M, L ) M(L)<br>#define $Line \<br> MakeString( Stringize, __LINE__ )<br>#define Reminder \<br> __FILE__ "(" $Line ") : Reminder: "<br>

Once defined, use like so:

<br>#pragma message(Reminder "Fix this problem!")<br>

This will create output like:

<br>C:\Source\Project\main.cpp(47): Reminder: Fix this problem!<br>

Hard code a debugger breakpoint

If you need to insert a hard breakpoint in your code (perhaps because you need to attach to a process), simply add the following line to your code.

__asm int 3;

Tracking GDI resource leaks

Plenty of tools exist to help track down memory leaks. You've got the debug heap, Rational Purify for Windows, HeapAgent, and other tools. But there aren't any good tools to help track GDI resource leaks. A resource leak can crash the system under Windows 95 or Windows 98, and can ruin performance on any Windows operating system.

The article "Resource Leaks: Detecting, Locating, and Repairing Your Leaky GDI Code" is the only real help I've found. In particular, the article includes a program that tracks current globally allocated resources under Windows 95 or Windows 98. You can track what resources were created between a start and stop points, and display what those resources are. Check the article for the download (Leaks.exe).

Update 2003-01-10: The very friendly people at Compuware have pointed out that BoundsChecker will detect GDI resource leaks. At the moment I'm doing Unix development work, so I haven't had a chance to test it myself, but if you're fighting GDI leaks, it might be worth checking out. At the moment it appears to carry a $695 price tag. They offer a trial period. (Regrettably of the "give us your contact info and we'll contact you about a trial" type.)

Memory Values

Check this page form information on "Funny" Memory Values. In particular:

If you're using the debug heap, memory is initialized and cleared with special values. Typically MFC automatically adds something like the following to your .cpp files to enable it:

#ifdef _DEBUG
#define new DEBUG_NEW
#undef THIS_FILE
static char THIS_FILE[] = __FILE__;
#endif

You can find information on using the debug heap here. Microsoft defines some of the magic values here.

While using the debug heap, you'll see the values:

ValueUsage
0xCDCDCDCD Allocated in heap, but not initialized
0xDDDDDDDD Released heap memory.
0xFDFDFDFD "NoMansLand" fences automatically placed at boundary of heap memory. Should never be overwritten. If you do overwrite one, you're probably walking off the end of an array.
0xCCCCCCCC Allocated on stack, but not initialized

Watch Values

The watch window has a number of undocumented or minimally documented features that make it even more useful.

Display GetLastError's value and message

You can display the value GetLastError() will return by putting "@err" in your watch window. You can see the error message associated with that value by putting "@err,hr" in your watch window. If you've placed an HRESULT in a variable, adding ",hr" to the variable name in the watch window will display the associated text.

Display pointer as an array

If you expand a pointer and you only get a single item, just add ",n" to the entry in the watch window where n is the number of elements to expand. For example, if you have a foo * pFoo pointing to an array of ten elements, put pFoo,10 in your watch window to see all of the element. This can be useful to view parts of a large array. If pFoo points to an array of 5,000 elements, you might use (pFoo + 2000),10 to see elements 2000 through 2009.

Debug checked casts

If you want maximum safety, you should always use dynamic_cast. However, if you feel you must optimize away those costs, use this version of checked_cast. It will ASSERT on a bad cast in Debug builds, but not do the slightly more expensive dynamic_cast in Release builds.

<br>// checked_cast - Uses fast static_cast in Release build,<br>// but checks cast with an ASSERT in Debug.<br>//<br>// Typical usage:<br>// class Foo { /* ... */ };<br>// class Bar : public Foo { /* ... */ };<br>// Foo * pFoo = new Bar;<br>// Bar * pBar = checked_cast<Bar *>(pFoo);<br><br>template <class TypeTo, class TypeFrom> <br>TypeTo checked_cast(TypeFrom p) <br>{ <br> ASSERT(dynamic_cast<TypeTo>(p)); <br> return static_cast<TypeTo>(p); <br>} <br>

Don't use SourceSafe

SourceSafe is problematic revision control system. The integration with Visual Studio is not worth the trouble. There are better solutions available. I've written a page with specific details on why Visual SourceSafe is a bad choice.


Unverified

These are notes taken by a David Carley from a video of a talk given by a Microsoft Visual Studio developer. Unfortunately the original video is no longer available (or at least hidden). I haven't verified most of these.

Avoiding Stepping Into Things

It's often useful to avoid stepping into some common code like constructors or overloaded operators. autoexp.dat provides this capability. Add a section called "[ExecutionControl]". Add keys where the key is the function name and the value is "NoStepInto". You can specify an asterisk (*) as a wildcard as the first set of colons for a namespace or class.

autoexp.dat is only read on Visual Studio's start up.

To ignore the function myfunctionname, and all calls to the class CFoo:

<br>[ExecutionControl]<br>myfunctionname=NoStepInto<br>CFoo::*=NoStepInto<br>

To ignore construction and assignment of MFC CStrings: (Notice the extra = in CString::operator=.)

<br>[ExecutionControl]<br>CString::CString=NoStepInto<br>CString::operator==NoStepInto<br>

To ignore all ATL calls:

<br>[ExecutionControl]<br>ATL::*=NoStepInto<br>

Function Evaluation

<br> Call program code from debugger<br> Use quickwatch window, not watch window.<br> e.g. DumpInfo (pFoo)<br> Great for debug data<br> Use OutputDebugString or printf<br> Limitations<br> 20 seconds max.<br> Terminate on exception.<br> Only one thread<br>

Multi-Threaded Debugging

Current Thread ID: NT4: dw @tib+24 (thread information block) Win9x: FS register is unique per thread You can use this to set a break point to only fire on a given thread

Naming Threads

Use "SetThreadName". The name is limited to 9 characters. SetThreadName fires an exception, which the debugger will catch and use to name the thread. The name will appears in Debug > Threads dialog.

#define MS_VC_EXCEPTION 0x406d1388 typedef struct tagTHREADNAME_INFO { DWORD dwType; // must be 0x1000 LPCSTR szName; // pointer to name (in same addr space) DWORD dwThreadID; // thread ID (-1 caller thread) DWORD dwFlags; // reserved for future use, most be zero } THREADNAME_INFO; void SetThreadName(DWORD dwThreadID, LPCTSTR szThreadName) { THREADNAME_INFO info; info.dwType = 0x1000; info.szName = szThreadName; info.dwThreadID = dwThreadID; info.dwFlags = 0; __try { RaiseException(MS_VC_EXCEPTION, 0, sizeof(info) / sizeof(DWORD), (DWORD *)&info); } except (EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_EXECUTION) { } }

Win32 Exceptions

If unhandled, kills app Debug > Exceptions dialog Stop Always or Stop if not Handled. Debugger sees exceptions before app, has control Stop Always lets you see where thrown Then, step, see where caught. Can add new exceptions watch output window Decoding C++ Exceptions Install ntdll.dbg to winnt\symbols\dll Set "Microsoft C++ Exception" to Stop Always

Breakpoints in System DLLs

System DLLs Windows NT only Can't just use the function name. Need the dll name too Determine DLL From Help or, grep in lib\win32api.csv Determinte the exact, unmangled name Set BP on {,,dllname}Function <=- special syntax Find true function name. Use dumpbin May need to enable "Load COFF & Exports" in 6.0

Breakpoint on certain argument values

  1. Set breakpoint
  2. Determine stack offset to argument (see disassembly window)
  3. Set condition e.g. dw esp+0x8 == 0xFFFFFFFF

Data Breakpoints

Data breakpoints are very powerful, but suffers from a confusing interface. Avoid entering "emulation" mode if possible, it's very slow.

It's often useful to break on an address: "*(long*)0x1234ABCD, length = 1".

The debugger can only support 4 hardware data breakpoints. If you use expressions (a + b), debugger uses emulation mode.

Data breakpoints only work on x86 processors, and can't catch kernel mode writes.

Data breakpoints can trigger operating system bugs. A data breakpoint set in one process might not be unset when the OS switches processes. This can cause other applications to crash. Windows 9x breaks often. Windows NT breaks less often. Reboot when it happens.

Count BPs Stop on the Nth iteration To Help find N: Set BP w/ very large count (C==10000) Run until your app crashes Look at count value (X) Set count BP on C-X-1 By Name Stays put through edits (as opposed to F9, for file/line number BPs)

Memory Leaks

Docs are confusing Indexed entries talk about MFC No clear description Go to "Visual C++ Documentation/Using Visual C++/Visual C++ Programmers Guide/Debugging/Debugging Techniques.Problems and Solutions/Solving Buffer Overwrites and Memory Leaks" (6.0) Include order is important Some things redefine malloc and free, etc. Step 1, include in global header file #define _CRTDBG_MAP_ALLOC #include <stdlib.h> #include <crtdbg.h> Step 2, enable checks in WinMain: // Enables tracking and reporting on shutdown. _CrtSetDbgFlag ( _CRTDBG_ALLOC_MEM_DF | _CRTDBG_LEAK_CHECK_DF); _CrtSetReportMode ( _CRT_ERROR, _CRTDBG_MODE_DEBUG); It may list file/line number Will list leak number set {,,msvcrtd.dll}_crtBreakAlloc = n (leak number) Or, look for ASCII clues.

Memory Corruption

Heap Corruption Enable heap checking (slow) {,,msvcrtd.dll}_crtDbgFlag = 5 Data BPs may be useful

Optimized Code

It's hard Compile with /Zi Variables vanish or are wrong Use disassembly window for truth Arguments usually OK except this fastcall Just find your bugs in Debug! 8)

Casting in the debugger

Need correct type name Debugger doesn't know typedefs To find the true typename, Add variable to watch, RClick, choose properties Scoping: variable defined in current DLL, type defined in another DLL: {,,foo.dll}(CMyClass *){*}pObject pObject is local, CMyClass defined in foo.dll

Modules Window

Debug.Modules Sort by: Module name Address range Useful for finding out what module you're in Find DLL of EIP Full path Ensure you're using the correct DLL Load order (default)

Debug Works, Release Doesn't

  • Uninitialized variables
    • Often 0 used in debug builds
    • Unless /GZ switch is enabled
  • Under/Overruns of memory
    • use debug heap (running in debugger on NT)
  • Wrong calling convention (esp. GetProcAddress)
    • Use /GZ in compiler
  • Optimizer unforgiving
  • Overwriting locals more likely
    • Locals packed on stack
    • Locals reused

It works When I Don't use the Debugger

Windows NT uses debug heap under debugger To avoid, attach to process, rather than launching under debugger. Thread timing different PATH may be different (when lauched under MSDEV, vs shell) Call GetEnvironmentString in app to check.

Timing Code

Add two watches

@clk @clk = 0

Watches are eval'd top to bottom. First one tells you the value of clock, second resets it. Each step will then update these values, and you can do simple profiling. Not good for assembly timing, because of debugger overhead.

Edit And Continue

Works on any builds Just use /ZI use SetNextStatement before you edit. either set it to a block before the section you want to edit, or, step out of the function, then step back in. Beware if you copy binaries Auto-relink only updates the target of the build, not the currently running copy. Your only warning is in the Output window Poor Man's Edit & Continue 0x90 = NOP Use in the disassmebly window to "comment-out" chunks of code 0x74, 0x75 == JE, JNE Use to switch the directional sense of an if statement.

Disassembly Tricks

Disambiguation dialog is annoying Choose any Ctrl+G (goto address) EIP Goes to current location.

Remote Debugging Made Easy

1. Local Machine Build Share directory to application Map back to local machine (O:) Build.Remote TCP/IP Settings.Machine Project.Settings.Debug Remote path = O:\foo\bar.exe 2. Remote machine: Install MSVCMON (you can Just install VC) (or not, if you want a very clean machine) Map share to same letter as local machine Makes finding DLLs easier Launch MSVCMON on remote Click Connect ignore all options 3. Start debugging Step & Go OK, no attach Default DLL path should be correct (VC6)

COM Debugging

Demo eax, hr Return values are in eax. If you know it's an HRESULT, you can do "eax,hr" and see the error message associated with that HRESULT. ,wm for window messages @err Use this in the watch window to display the value that GetLastError would return. @err, hr will show the msg associated with the GetLastError value. GUIDS and VARIANTs decoded New in VC 6.0 Make sure "Display Unicode Strings" is enabled in the options to show BSTRs etc.

Verify validity of COM object

// Verify that a pointer to a COM object is still valid // // Usage: // VERIFY_COM_INTERFACE(pFoo); // template <class Q> void VERIFY_COM_INTERFACE (Q *p) { # ifdef DEBUG p->AddRef(); p->Release(); # endif }

Verify validity of a BSTR

// Verify that a BSTER really is a BSTR and is handled correctly // Warning! Fails on BSTRs which contain embedded nulls // Usage: // VERIFY_BSTR(bstrName) // #ifdef DEBUG # define VERIFY_BSTR(bstr) do { \ ASSERT(SysStringLen(bstr) == wcslen(bstr)); \ } while (0) #else # define VERIFY_BSTR(bstr) do {} while (0); #endif

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