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C6263

warning C6263: using _alloca in a loop; this can quickly overflow stack

This warning indicates that calling _alloca inside a loop to allocate memory can cause stack overflow. _alloca allocates memory from the stack, but that memory is only freed when the calling function exits. Stack, even in user-mode, is limited, and failure to commit a page of stack causes a stack overflow exception. The _resetstkoflw function recovers from a stack overflow condition, allowing a program to continue instead of failing with a fatal exception error. If the _resetstkoflw function is not called, there is no guard page after the previous exception. The next time that there is a stack overflow, there are no exceptions at all and the process terminates without warning.

You should avoid calling _allocainside a loop if either the allocation size or the iteration count is unknown because it might cause stack overflow. In these cases, consider other options such as, heap memory, or Standard C++ Library Reference classes.

Example

The following code generates this warning:

#include <windows.h>
#include <malloc.h>
#include <excpt.h>
#include <stdio.h>

#define MAX_SIZE 50

void f ( int size )
{
  char* cArray;
  __try
  {
    for(int i = 0; i < MAX_SIZE; i+)
    {
      cArray = (char *)_alloca(size);

     // process cArray...
    }
  }
  __except(GetExceptionCode() == STATUS_STACK_OVERFLOW ? 
              EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER : EXCEPTION_CONTINUE_SEARCH )
  {
     // code...
     puts("Allocation Failed");
    _resetstkoflw();
  }
}

The following code uses malloc( ) to correct this warning:

#include <windows.h>
#define MAX_SIZE 50

void f ( int size )
{
  char* cArray;

  for(int i = 0; i < MAX_SIZE; i+)
  {
     cArray = (char *) malloc(size);
     if (cArray != NULL)
     {
       // process cArray...
       free(cArray);
     }
  }
}

See Also

Reference

malloc

_alloca

_malloca

Other Resources

Standard C++ Library Reference