last day (15 days later) » 

19:25
1
Q: Is a windows' executable' name influencing default memory usage?

z0rberg'sWindows 10, fpc 3.2.0, 5900HS. I've written a pascal program (likely irrelevant). I've been using the first gigabyte of address space after 256x256x256x256 (aka 4gigs) for virtual memory mapping. I've encountered that, at the address 4300865536, my code fails to create a mapping. Noteworthy, but ...

Possibly related: Image File Execution Options. Also could be appcompat. If you have a manifest or config in the same folder, and are not renaming the manifest/config, then that could also be relevant.
I have no manifests or configs. I don't even know what a manifest is. I don't write GUI programs, in case it's related. I don't understand how "application compatibility" could come into play. i always compile and run my programs in the command line, using a batch file.
Manifests are a windows feature which allow an app developer to influence how the OS will run an exe. They can be embedded into the exe, or they can be a separate file in the pattern appname.exe.manifest. If they are embedded in the exe, renaming has no effect. If a separate file, then the manifest would not apply if only the exe was renamed.
AppCompat can come into play because it will be applied automatically (with a prompt) if the program crashes in a particular way that suggests a compatibility issue. You can unapply compatibility caused by the Program Compatibility Troubleshooter. AppCompat has hundreds of fixes that could have been applied. Fixes are applied for an exe name.
Image File Execution Options is another feature which applies to a particular exe name. There are many IFEOs which influence the heap. Not sure any apply to your scenario, but maybe. Debuggers sometimes set IFEO's.
@Mitch Bing tells me that, because I run the program from the command line, the compatibility feature does not apply. I wouldn't know how anyway. There is also no prompt happening, but I didn't turn off UAC. I don't know what else to do with this.
@Mitch Re IFEO. I don't know what to do with that information. I've looked through the available options, but it makes no sense to assume that any of these are influenced by the name of the program. I never had this issue and nothing changed. FPC isn't particularly smart, it wouldn't change things on its own. The executables are 100% the same. I can't find any information about a manifest without having Lazarus flood my search results. Following your link, I see no reason why this should apply to my program at all.
I just tested PCT on a command line app, it runs fine. I can't speak to whether it would be suggested automatically. I'd still recommend checking IFEO and AppCompatFlags just to be sure.

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\AppCompatFlags\Layers
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\AppCompatFlags\Layers
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\
I still don't understand your question, though. Do you mean you are specifying lpAddress = 1 << 32 instead of nullptr? That's going to be very challenging to ensure the address space is free. It's also quite an odd requirement to have a specific address for an allocation. ASLR and any DLL that loads before you is going to potentially break a call with a non-0 lpAddress.
19:29
i don't know what you're asking me, or what's supposedly challenging.
What is the call you are making to VirtualAlloc that is failing?
I also don't know why that's odd, at all. Address space is vast and I make good use of it.
VirtualAlloc(Pointer(256*256*256*256),1024*1024*1024*8,MEM_RESERVE,Page_READWRITE)

This always worked before. No exceptions.
it returns ...
GetLastError is 487.
Address space is normally randomized as a security mechanism. While it is "vast", conflicts will and do happen. There is no guarantee a particular address is available unless ASLR is disabled and you control all the DLL's loaded in the process prior to your call to VirtualAlloc
yeah, i don't need to care about that. i also don't need to care about DLLs. there are no DLLs randomly being brought into my process' memory.
and i never needed to care about looking at ASLR before. All I ever needed to do was making sure freepascal shoves it all down to the near start of the address space.
You may not be loading any dll's, but there are certainly ones being loaded. E.g.: your compiler's standard library, windows libraries, graphics drivers, etc...
Use a debugger to inspect the address space to see what is loaded at that address.
19:34
Yeah, sure, I use the windows API. Still, there is no point in worrying about these things that always worked before, without exception, for more years than I can count.
Random means it can work 99% of the time.
How can a debugger tell me what's there at that address?
It is still broken.
Depends on the debugger.
Never needed one, so I'm not familiar.
Windbg is lm and it will print the list of modules and their address space.
19:35
process explorer?
okay, but can you explain why the position of DLLs in memory would change to where they shouldn't be, just because of a specific file name?
Looks like process explorer can show the start address. It's not clear if you can show the end address with process explorer.
Probably something to do with prefetch.
winget install Microsoft.WinDbg
Failed in attempting to update the source: winget
Found WinDbg [Microsoft.WinDbg] Version 1.2306.12001.0
This application is licensed to you by its owner.
Microsoft is not responsible for, nor does it grant any licenses to, third-party packages.
An unexpected error occurred while executing the command:
0x80070005 : unknown error
checking in process explorer.
i can't seem to figure out how to figure this out. created a dump, will look at that.
... that proved useless.
You should be able to load a dump in widngb
*windbg
yes, but as written above does the installation error out.
windbg is installed as part of the Windows SDK developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/windows-sdk
I don't think it is available separately.
19:45
the msdn site gave me a one-liner to install it: winget install Microsoft.WinDbg

I don't have the SDK installed. I don't require it. Huge waste of space.
the msdn site = "learn.microsoft.com" ^_^
You don't have to install the entire SDK to install windbg
The winget error you gave earlier is Access Denied. Was the install run as administrator?
right. the appinstaller works.
it's ... slow.
okay, i got windbg running.
Ensure you opened the matching bitness of your process, then open the dump.
Run lm in the command line
(or open the Modules window)
lol it does not recognize drives created by subst ... Sighs
lm. okay.
lm is not recognized. it didn't add itself to the path or anything.
Did you run lm in windbg?
It's not a separate executable.
19:50
ah. no. but now i just started my exe in windbg.
Microsoft (R) Windows Debugger Version 10.0.14321.1024 AMD64
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

CommandLine: C:\twitch\eve\data\tranquility\universe\starsdb.exe
Symbol search path is: srv*
Executable search path is:
ModLoad: 00000000`00010000 00000000`0003b000   image00000000`00010000
ModLoad: 00007ff8`5f150000 00007ff8`5f348000   ntdll.dll
ModLoad: 00007ff8`5dbc0000 00007ff8`5dc7d000   C:\Windows\System32\KERNEL32.DLL
ModLoad: 00007ff8`5cb20000 00007ff8`5ce16000   C:\Windows\System32\KERNELBASE.dll
Did you load the dump or did you launch your exe?
launch.
it's running in a busyloop right now.
Dump is probably easier.
Otherwise you will need to learn the full debugger.
okay, hold on.
(e.g.: g = start running, Ctrl+Break = pause execution)
19:53
?
i don't know what you're telling me, or why.
it says i should "open crash dump" but that option is greyed out. ^_^
maybe doubleclicking in explorer...
that worked
That was before you said you would load the dump. When you are launching a process, g starts it running, and Ctrl+Break pauses it running.
👍
ah
************* Preparing the environment for Debugger Extensions Gallery repositories **************
   ExtensionRepository : Implicit
   UseExperimentalFeatureForNugetShare : true
   AllowNugetExeUpdate : true
   NonInteractiveNuget : true
   AllowNugetMSCredentialProviderInstall : true
   AllowParallelInitializationOfLocalRepositories : true

   EnableRedirectToV8JsProvider : false

   -- Configuring repositories
      ----> Repository : LocalInstalled, Enabled: true
      ----> Repository : UserExtensions, Enabled: true
Yeah. Nothing notable there. You should have a prompt at the bottom. Enter lm or !address 00000001`00000000
my brain suggests we're nowhere near the solution, given that it's the file name of the exe that causes this behaviour.
will do
0:000> !address 0000000100000000


Mapping file section regions...
Mapping module regions...
Mapping PEB regions...
Mapping TEB and stack regions...
Mapping heap regions...
Mapping page heap regions...
Mapping other regions...
Mapping stack trace database regions...
Mapping activation context regions...

Usage:                  Free
Base Address:           00000000`7ffee000
End Address:            00000001`80000000
Region Size:            00000001`00012000 (   4.000 GB)
State:                  00010000          MEM_FREE
FYI: the busyloop is right at the start, right after virtualalloc. my program did nothing but that.
Yeah. So that is saying that there is something allocated at 00000001`80000000
19:59
it wasn't me doing that.
Since you are asking for 00000001`00000000 through 00000003`00000000, it is conflicting.
Yeah. Like I said, a lot of things run before your first line of code.
i can narrow down the range i use in virtualalloc, until the error stops happening,if that helps?
If you run !address 00000001`80000000 it will say what was allocated.
0:000> !address 00000001`80000000

Usage:                  Image
Base Address:           00000001`80000000
End Address:            00000001`80003000
Region Size:            00000000`00003000 (  12.000 kB)
State:                  00001000          MEM_COMMIT
Protect:                00000002          PAGE_READONLY
Type:                   01000000          MEM_IMAGE
Allocation Base:        00000001`80000000
Allocation Protect:     00000080          PAGE_EXECUTE_WRITECOPY
Image Path:             C:\Windows\System32\sfc.dll
oha. sfc.
There's no "easy fix" for this. Modern OS's do not guarantee in any appreciable way that a particular address will always be available.
20:02
rolls eyes this is the first and only time ever.
and it's because of the name of the executable.
why is sfc.dll even loading?
i'm not asking for it and freepascal certainly doesn't do it by itself.
there must be ways of dealing with this, otherwise the whole idea of mapping pages around in memory becomes kind of useless.
It's really not because of the name of the exe. The address space layout may be cached by the name of the exe, but there is never a guarantee (with ASLR, and without very careful control of the entrypoint code). I have no evidence of it, but you might try clearing prefetch to see if that is where it is cached. It **will** break again in the future though, just maybe not today.

No idea why SFC is loading. You can break on load with `sxe ld:sfc` then print the stack with `k` to get an idea.
windows prefetch? ... i've compiled my program without ASLR and the same happens regardless.
i don't think "sxe ld.sfc" did anything. "break on load" makes no sense to me, but i am not familiar with windbg.
sxe ld:sfc will set a breakpoint on the load of sfc.dll. You would have to launch the exe under the debugger for that to hit.
You might review a windbg tutorial to get acquainted.
20:15
i will never again need this.
or, maybe in the next 40 years.
I'm happy to be wrong - your question is still open, and someone else may correct me, but I'm fairly confident in this. Good luck.
I'm signing off for the day.
thank you for your help!
Of course.
 
3 hours later…
22:48
Back in the day, Windows would have shims in place to change API behavior for well known apps - identified by their executable name. The most common shim was for "setup.exe". I don't know if these compat shims still exist or if they applied to other executable names. But it was a thing at one point. If you simple rename your EXE and see different behavior...

last day (15 days later) »