Returning C++ objects from Windows DLL
- by R Samuel Klatchko
Due to how Microsoft implements the heap in their non-DLL versions of the runtime, returning a C++ object from a DLL can cause problems:
// dll.h
DLL_EXPORT std::string somefunc();
and:
// app.c - not part of DLL but in the main executable
void doit()
{
std::string str(somefunc());
}
The above code runs fine provided both the DLL and the EXE are built with the Multi-threaded DLL runtime library.
But if the DLL and EXE are built without the DLL runtime library (either the single or multi-threaded versions), the code above fails (with a debug runtime, the code aborts immediately due to the assertion _CrtIsValidHeapPointer(pUserData) failing; with a non-debug runtime the heap gets corrupted and the program eventually fails elsewhere).
Two questions:
Is there a way to solve this other then requiring that all code use the DLL runtime?
For people who distribute their libraries to third parties, how do you handle this? Do you not use C++ objects in your API? Do you require users of your library to use the DLL runtime? Something else?