On 30/12/21 23:46, John Thacker wrote:
On Thu, Dec 30, 2021 at 5:55 PM Gerald Combs <ger...@wireshark.org> wrote: On 12/29/21 5:15 PM, John Thacker wrote: > I was working on a MR for moving the text2pcap/text_import debug over to the ws_log features and I ran into a seemingly bizarre problem. Setting the log level to a non-default value causes the pytest procedures to fail with heap corruption on the Gitlab Windows CI. > > Some of the text2pcap pytests depend on grepping through the stderr output for some of the debug information. Those tests originally passed the -d flag to text2pcap, so I replaced it with setting the log level to "debug" (and later "info") with the standard "--log-level debug" argument read by ws_log_parse_args(). > > On Windows (but not Linux or MacOS, not clang or gcc, nor with either using ASAN), those tests which set the log level (and only those tests) started failing with a return code of 0xc0000374, heap corruption. > > As I looked into it closer, all the debug information that those tests used ought to be logged at "warning" or "message," which are at the default log level, so I was able to remove that flag, and then it passed. > > It looks like it might be related to some of the things discussed here, though I'm not 100% sure because I'm not a Windows programmer: > > https://discuss.wxpython.org/t/heap-corruption-on-windows/35583 <https://discuss.wxpython.org/t/heap-corruption-on-windows/35583> > https://bugs.python.org/issue36792 <https://bugs.python.org/issue36792> > https://bugs.python.org/issue37945 <https://bugs.python.org/issue37945> > > There's some kind of issue seen in Python 3.8 and higher, with Windows 10 build 1809 (which is a long term support build that is what the CI build server uses), with UTF-8 locales, with log systems that get system locale information and print dates, the Windows 10 Universal CRT, and heap corruption. > > It might have something to do with the tests spawning a lot of subprocesses in parallel and setting the log level to a different value eventually calling free_log_filter() from ws_log_set_debug_filter(). Is https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/pipelines/438735249 one of the pipelines that failed? If so, it looks like Wireshark is crashing and Python is complaining about its return code: ---- Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\builds\wireshark\wireshark\test\fixtures.py", line 54, in wrapped test_fn(self, *fixtures) File "C:\builds\wireshark\wireshark\test\suite_text2pcap.py", line 186, in test_text2pcap_ikev1_certs_pcap check_text2pcap(self, 'ikev1-certs.pcap', 'pcap') File "C:\builds\wireshark\wireshark\test\suite_text2pcap.py", line 144, in check_text2pcap_real self.assertRun(text2pcap_cmd, shell=True) File "C:\builds\wireshark\wireshark\test\subprocesstest.py", line 304, in assertRun self.assertEqual(process.returncode, expected_return) AssertionError: 3221226356 != 0 ----Yes, that's one of them. 3221226356= 0xc0000374 and is apparently a special Windows return code for heap corruption.
It is noticeable in that CI log that the UTF-8 console output is corrupted. It works flawlessly in my Windows VM, which is running all the latest updates, so it looks like you are on the right track.
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