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I'm new to the forum but I've read through this thread ( ) and posted there as well but no response as yet, but it's an old thread so hence why I'm making this one. I've a problem with getting hold of a vista sfloppy.sys file though. Can anyone tell me which version of vista I need for it / how to get it / or simply attach the file to a reply?
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I've just finished trying the last suggestion now (installing xp vm and running the floppy as a virtual drive) - but it says the same messages that windows 7 does. Even if it did work it seems a little redundant to have to install our work software on a vm just to use a floppy drive.
The messages I get are as follows: When I double click the drive in my computer: The disk needs to be formatted. (Even if it works fine in a normal drive it will say this). When I click format in the message above it says: Windows cannot format the disk. When I try using command line format it does the following: Insert new disk for drive B: and press ENTER when ready.
The type of the file system is RAW. The new file system is FAT. Verifying 1.44M (Then it starts at 0% and after about 5-10 seconds displays the next line) Invalid media or Track 0 bad - disk unusable. At least it's more informative than the windows formatter (which is useless for floppy disks anyway in my experience).
The floppy drive shows up in my computer but NOT in disk management. I'm doing this on my PC at home which is running the same version of windows as our work computers (Windows 7 Ultimate x64). All the computers are consistent in their error messages.
Really need to get this working because I work with fairly dated industrial machines that only read floppy disks and we've just purchased a new PC which does not have the floppy IDE port on the mobo. If we can't read & write to floppy disks on the work pc there is no point in even having it and we will have just wasted $600 odd dollars. Also, our old PC (which has a normal IDE floppy drive) is becoming unreliable due to age and overheating - hence why we spent the money on a new PC in the first place. It's worth noting that the manufacturer of the industrial machines we use does have a USB adapter that you plug a flash drive into and put the other end (which is a floppy disk) into the machine but they want $600 for that too and we think that's a little unreasonable. Also, a newer machine that uses flash drives instead of floppy disks will cost at least $70,000 plus taxes so we'd prefer not to have to buy one!!! Thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer. Welcome to the forum.
And kudos (if that's still a word lol) for the well written accounts of the problem. I've searched high and low for you on this one, and information regarding the issue is sketchy at best. Microsoft tech support goes through the usual condescending path. These are: does the issue effect other usb peripheral storage devices? Run hardware trouble shoot. But in your case device manage does not recognise your drive And finally update usb chipset drivers to the latest version.
Out of interest does the drive show up in disk drive management as a mass storage device, and or a drive without an associated letter? (Your pictures may show this but I can't see them on my phone for some reason) Sent from my BlackBerry 9900 using Tapatalk. Run hardware trouble shoot. But in your case device manage does not recognise your driveThe device shows up in device manager just fine (see attached screenshots). Hardware troubleshoot only detects that I have my virtual box lan adapter disabled and my internal floppy drive disabled (because I don't have one, didn't see any point in having the drive show up in my computer when it doesn't exist). I've attached a screenshot to show you what I mean. I originally had the floppy drive enabled when I first plugged the USB one in, and it still didn't work so re-enabling the non-existent one won't help things any.
Out of interest does the drive show up in disk drive management as a mass storage device, and or a drive without an associated letter? (Your pictures may show this but I can't see them on my phone for some reason) Sent from my BlackBerry 9900 using TapatalkNo it doesn't show up in disk management at all, just in My Computer (as a Floppy Disk Drive).
I've also attached a screenshot of this with some (badly drawn) additions for clarification. Thanks for the help and suggestions, though! Keep 'em coming:) bioNuke P.S. It's so nice to not have anyone telling me to go get a Mac!!!
Lol that was my next suggestion!! I'm also a mac person but shh don't want to become an outcast lol.
Did the drive come with any software? That can be ran in compatibility mode? Also do you have access to a non windows 7 machine? An old laptop or anything, even your old unreliable pc at work. Want to determine if this is a windows problem or other.
I'm determine to solve this one lol don't know why maybe its the fact you didn't start your thead with 'HELP!?!?!?!?!?,?,?bhdijbfjk floppy won't work!!!!!' I shall do some more research (it will help me avoid the work I'm being paid to do lol) Sent from my BlackBerry 9900 using Tapatalk. Just a random thought, but is it possible the USB floppy only handles DD disks (720KB) and you're trying to use HD 1.44MB disks with it? Sure would explain the complete failure to format.
As for why the drive doesn't show up in Disk Management, that's typical for logical drives as opposed to physical devices in Windows. Not to be confused with logical partitions on an MBR harddisk, logical drives are basically just emulated, virtual drives (like a RAM disk or a CD/DVD mounted image). Maybe that's how the driver for the USB floppy works; by presenting the disk inside the physical floppy as a logical drive to Windows. Badger: good idea about the ISA card, but I'm afraid his mobo isn't going to have any ISA slots - those went the way of the dodo even before floppy controllers!
Keyboard Standard Mouse Microsoft wireless optical mouse PSU Antec TruePower 2.0 Case Cooler Master Centurion Cooling Too many fans Hard Drives OCZ SSD Vertex Plus 60GB SATA (Firmware 3.55), 64MB cache Hitachi HD321KJ SATA, 320GB, 7200rpm, 16MB cache Internet Speed AT&T U-verse (18mbit/sec) Antivirus Microsoft Security Essentials Browser Firefox Other Info Other devices: Compaq CQ-60 laptop Google Nexus 7 (2012) tablet Nvidia SHIELD tablet (US/LTE) Hardkernel ODROID-XU single-board computer (Samsung Exynos 5420). Did the drive come with any software? That can be ran in compatibility mode?Unfortunately, no. No CD, DVD, Floppy or otherwise. I have looked around on the net as well, but couldn't find anything that worked. The model number of the device is FD-05PUB, no branding though. From memory I think I found it was a Teac, but with the amount of sleep I've been getting lately I wouldn't rely on that!
I've attached a couple of photos of the drive (what it looks like and the sticker on the bottom which shows model number etc). Sorry about the quality, my phone's camera is crap.
Don't buy a HTC Desire Z!!! Ok I've come across a work around if all else fails (but being old tech second hand route maybe needed) You cannot get a pci express floppy disk controller, but you can get an ISA floppy controller. A ISA card won't work in a pci slot as they aren't backwards compatible. But you can get a ISA to pci slot adapter card.
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If you see where I'm going with this lol Sent from my BlackBerry 9900 using TapatalkI've never even heard of an ISA slot lol, when I got into computers a Geforce2 was considered awesome, back when good old AGP was the go. I shall have a look around though and see what I can find.
Unfortunately I don't really know what I'm looking for but we'll see what I can rummage up. (I'll try googling 'PCI to ISA adapter' and 'ISA Floppy Controller' and see what turns up). Just a random thought, but is it possible the USB floppy only handles DD disks (720KB) and you're trying to use HD 1.44MB disks with it?
Sure would explain the complete failure to format.That is indeed entirely possible but I fail to see why manufacturers would make a drive that only supports disks that I can't find anywhere. But hey, people have made worse decisions. Is there any way to check which type of floppy it supports?
Other than actually using a 720K floppy, since I don't have one anywhere, and given floppy disks reliability, even if I found one it would probably be dead by now. As for why the drive doesn't show up in Disk Management, that's typical for logical drives as opposed to physical devices in Windows. Not to be confused with logical partitions on an MBR harddisk, logical drives are basically just emulated, virtual drives (like a RAM disk or a CD/DVD mounted image). Maybe that's how the driver for the USB floppy works; by presenting the disk inside the physical floppy as a logical drive to Windows.That makes sense to me, however I have Daemon Tools installed with a virtual bluray drive and it shows up in my disk management. So maybe that isn't always the case?
I'm new to the forum but I've read through this thread ( ) and posted there as well but no response as yet, but it's an old thread so hence why I'm making this one. I've a problem with getting hold of a vista sfloppy.sys file though.
Can anyone tell me which version of vista I need for it / how to get it / or simply attach the file to a reply? I've just finished trying the last suggestion now (installing xp vm and running the floppy as a virtual drive) - but it says the same messages that windows 7 does. Even if it did work it seems a little redundant to have to install our work software on a vm just to use a floppy drive. The messages I get are as follows: When I double click the drive in my computer: The disk needs to be formatted. (Even if it works fine in a normal drive it will say this).
When I click format in the message above it says: Windows cannot format the disk. When I try using command line format it does the following: Insert new disk for drive B: and press ENTER when ready.
The type of the file system is RAW. The new file system is FAT. Verifying 1.44M (Then it starts at 0% and after about 5-10 seconds displays the next line) Invalid media or Track 0 bad - disk unusable.Thanks for all the suggestions guys! The one thing I was most interested in though was in this thread: Apparently some people have had some luck getting usb floppy drives to work when they use an sfloppy.sys file from vista or xp.
Unfortunately the posts in that thread were a bit unclear as to which version of xp/vista they got the file from. Since I don't own either of them I'll need to download an image of the disc to grab the file and I need to know which one to download. I know my problem is a bit different to theirs but at this point I'm ready to give it a go. Well, I have a surprise for you:) The red floppy disk in your photo really is a DD 720KB disk, not a 1.44MB one. Now I wonder if the issue is actually reversed: trying to format a 720KB as 1.44MB = obvious failure. You can tell by the holes at the corners opposite the metal slider. There's only one, which is the write protection.
HD disks have another hole (without a slider to open/close the hole) on the other side identifying them as 1.44MB. Regarding Daemon Tools showing up in Disk Management, well, that would be a true emulation of a physical drive vs.
A simple logical drive - it just depends on how the device driver is implementing it, could be either one. But it's safe to say it really makes no difference in regard to the USB floppy working or not, so no worries there. Try to format the floppy as 720K (must be specified as a commandline option with format). Does that work? BTW, badger, I didn't see you mentioning an ISA-to-PCI adapter at first.did you edit your post after I replied, or was I just blind?
Keyboard Standard Mouse Microsoft wireless optical mouse PSU Antec TruePower 2.0 Case Cooler Master Centurion Cooling Too many fans Hard Drives OCZ SSD Vertex Plus 60GB SATA (Firmware 3.55), 64MB cache Hitachi HD321KJ SATA, 320GB, 7200rpm, 16MB cache Internet Speed AT&T U-verse (18mbit/sec) Antivirus Microsoft Security Essentials Browser Firefox Other Info Other devices: Compaq CQ-60 laptop Google Nexus 7 (2012) tablet Nvidia SHIELD tablet (US/LTE) Hardkernel ODROID-XU single-board computer (Samsung Exynos 5420). Similar help and support threads Thread Forum If someone will look at post right before this one I replied to, I'm having same issues with EXACT same external floppy drive. I have 1.44 HD discs. Can't figure it out. Please help me. I would list all the issues, yet their the same that bioNuke had. Please someone, help me:( Hardware & Devices So I have had windows 7 for a while and I was using my computer when it got and I must have overloaded it and it gave me a blue screen.
My audio doesn't work and when I got to the playback devices its empty I have the boxes checked off to show all the devices but it shows absolutely nothing. Sound & Audio I was having no problems with my WIN7 X64 bit till I plugged in a USB floppy and copied some photos to the hard drive. The windows portion of the boot went to approx 5 times what it was. I have disabled all the boot devices except the hard drive and have uninstalled the driver that WIN7 installed. Hardware & Devices Hi there sevenforums! Ok, so I have an unusual issue.
I have 1 computer and 1 laptop with Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit Edition Build 7600 on both of them, and both have all updated (and proper) drivers. I have tried installing these games in attempts to see what sorts of games will work and what. Gaming Please tell me someone else has this issue! Cause its confusing the hell out of me, and after changing a million things in the BIOS and other things nothing works!
When i first went to install windows 7, it would remain on the first blue blank screen. (the one before all the installation options. Installation & Setup Our Sites Site Links About Us Find Us.
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So while we prepare to toast the end of the long national nightmare of Oscarless Leo, let's take a look back at his last nomination and wonder how this losing streak lasted so long. The Wolf of Wall Street is Leo at his most fun, free and deranged. As Jordan Belfort, a corrupt stock broker who makes millions by defrauding investors out of millions, Leo gives a performance that I honestly didn't think he had in him. He actually smiled, people! He's hilarious/tragic while playing high on quaaludes and unable to get into his car! But beyond showing new signs of life on the lighter side of things, he still brought it when it came time to get serious. His altercation with his wife and daughter near the end of the movie is INTENSE Leo at his best. And as someone who has grown up watching (and loving) Leo, I couldn't be more excited to see him take home the gold on Sunday. What to Eat: Candy When I was thinking about the food in the movie, I realized that the only thing these characters swallow with any regularity is pills.
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Coyote Calling Sounds
I slowly lifted the remote and looked at the timer5:11, 5:12, 5:13. The first five minutes of the stand had been uneventful to say the least, much like the previous five stands we had already made that morning. Was I using the right sound? Was the sound carrying far enough? Were we sitting long enough? Were there even any coyotes within earshot to hear it?
These were just a few of the questions that bounced through my mind while I sat there waiting patiently. It was late February and we were calling some of the most coyote-rich and picturesque country this great nation has to offer — the sandhills of Nebraska. Optimism was high earlier that morning as we drove through the darkness on a one-lane paved road into the middle of no-man’s land, but after five dry stands and an increasing wind, our dedication and enthusiasm were being tested. The sun was already high in the late-morning sky and I knew that the coyotes would be making the transition from their hunting grounds to their bedding areas.
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So we headed to a choppy range of yucca-covered sandhills paralleled by vast hay meadows on either side. I glared back down at the remote6:47, 6:48, 6:49. After nearly seven minutes of a screaming jackrabbit without any takers, I decided that something completely different was in order. I scrolled through the sound list, highlighted “coyote pup screams,” and pressed play. Once I had the volume up to an adequate level, I briefly surveyed our setup one last time.
The wind was ideal, blowing from left to right around 15 mph. Brett and his trusty.22-250 Rem. Stayed with the camera and me. We tucked ourselves into a cluster of yucca plants and had an unobstructed view of nearly 75 percent of the calling area.
In order to get a handle on the remaining 25 percent, Joe positioned himself roughly 60 yards downwind of us on the backside of a small rise. The e-caller and decoy were strategically stuffed into the top of a yucca out in front of our position approximately 30 yards. The imaginary line from us to the caller was perpendicular to the wind direction. The setup was spot-on. All we needed now was a willing participant. Sometime around the 10-minute mark, I heard the one word I had been waiting so patiently to hear all morning. “Coyote,” Brett whispered.
With a slight turn of my head, I briefly caught a pale-gray blur descending off the hillside 300 yards out. “He’s coming hard,” Brett said hastily. Within a matter of seconds, the coyote had closed the distance to less than 150 yards and slowed to a trot as he crested a small knoll in front of us. At that exact time, the Mojo Critter let loose with one of its erratic spins and the coyote’s strides lengthened again. “I’m gonna try and stop him,” Brett said, but it was too late.
In what seemed like a couple blinks of the eye, the big male had closed the gap to less than 40 yards and was making a beeline for the e-caller and decoy. The.22-250 Rem. Barked, and in an awesome display of speed and energy, the 50-grain V-max completely incapacitated the coyote in mid-stride.
The coyote came to an abrupt headfirst halt less than 3 yards from the FOXPRO CS-24! After our schoolgirl giggles had subsided and in between the head shakes of disbelief, I glanced down at the remote one last time11:24, 11:25, 11:26. So what was the key to our success on this stand?
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Did we finally get within earshot of an unsuspecting coyote? So why did this big male not come charging in to the screaming jackrabbit that was playing the first seven minutes of the stand? Maybe he was making a slow approach. Possibly he had gotten a little bit of an education earlier in the season. Perhaps it was the mild winter we were having.
So why did the coyote-pup distress invoke such a rapid and aggressive response? Maybe it was due to the time of year. Possibly we triggered an instinctual response that the coyote had no control over. Perhaps it was due to the area we set up in. Regardless, these are all great questions and ones that I’ll discuss throughout the remainder of the article. Sound Categories And Behavioral Triggers Eight years ago I was introduced to a priceless theory that different sounds might trigger different responses in coyotes.
During a day of sharing stands and taking turns dragging coyotes back to the truck, a good friend of mine and a coyote-killing veteran of more than 40 years shared his “Triple F Theory.” He said, “Coyotes will come to the call for several reasons. To feed, to fight, or to.” Well, I’ll let you figure out what his third “F” was. He continued by adding, “It’s up to you to figure out what the coyotes are wanting that particular day and give them the corresponding sound.” As simple as it sounds, it was something that I hadn’t put much thought into before that day. From that point on, I started categorizing the sounds on my call.
In today’s market of high-tech e-callers and large, diverse sound libraries, it’s easy to get overwhelmed when picking and loading sounds onto your call. To simplify things, I’ve classified all the sounds used specifically for calling coyotes into three categories: prey distress, coyote and coyote-pup distress and coyote vocalizations. Give yourself the most diverse variety possible within each category, but don’t overload your e-caller with too many sounds from one category. In an ideal situation with an e-caller holding 100 sounds, loading 34 prey-distress sounds, 33 coyote/coyote-pup distress sounds, and 33 coyote vocalizations would be optimal. Now that the three sound categories have been identified, it’s time to discuss the triggers. Although remembering the three “Fs” is probably easier, let’s break things down a little further by identifying four triggers: hunger, curiosity, territorial and parental.
Of the four, hunger and curiosity are responsible for calling in the most coyotes. Is it because these are the easiest triggers to invoke? Or is it because the average coyote hunter is primarily using sounds that trigger these two responses?
I believe it’s a little of both. Triggering territorial and parental responses can be very effective as well, but understanding certain coyote characteristics and coyote behavior is the key to being able to trigger these responses on a consistent basis throughout the entire hunting season. Coyote Behavior Before we can tie everything together into a practical game plan, let’s discuss coyote behavior from early fall through early spring. During the month of September and the early part of October, the coyote family group is still intact. The pups are still in the general vicinity of their spring denning site, but they are learning to hunt on their own. Food is plentiful, with insects and plants still available for consumption.
Hunting pressure is minimal and coyote densities and numbers are the highest they will be all season. In late October and into November, the family group breaks down and the pups head out on their own. During this timeframe, a good portion of the coyote population is composed of young, transient coyotes roaming the countryside looking for their own territory to establish. The food supply is minimized and easy meals such as grasshoppers are gone with the colder temperatures.
The coyotes must now take to catching rodents, rabbits and birds. Hunting pressure has significantly increased and the coyote numbers and densities are dropping. In December through the first half of January, most coyotes have now established a territory.
Winter has hit with full force, and keeping food in its belly is priority number one for a coyote. Hunting pressure is extremely high, and the coyote numbers and densities are continuing to drop. During the last half of January and February, the remaining coyote population turns its focus to repopulating. Mating is now the priority, and the females will come into heat sometime around the first of February. Food sources are dwindling, and the coyotes must continue to hunt on a daily basis. Hunting pressure remains high, and many of the remaining coyotes have had some sort of educational experience during the previous four months.
In March and April the coyote pairs have established a den. Territory is now the focus.
Defending remaining food sources from being eaten by other coyotes is important for the survival of the litters. The family group will spend the next six months in this location. Hunting pressure has dropped significantly, and as long as 30 percent of the coyote population survived the winter, there will be just as many coyotes again next fall.
The Game Plan By now, you’ve begun to see the relationship between the different sound categories, the triggers they invoke and how this relationship is affected by the changing of seasons. Prey distresses will generally trigger a hunger or curiosity response. Coyote and coyote-pup distresses will generally trigger a parental or territorial response. Coyote vocalizations will generally trigger a territorial or curiosity response. Early in the season, concentrate on triggering a curiosity, hunger or parental response. Midway through the season, concentrate on triggering a hunger, territorial or parental response.
During the late-season, concentrate on triggering a territorial, parental or curiosity response. Let’s discuss how to implement this correctly. 1 It’s early October, and you’re headed out to call your favorite piece of ground for the first time this season. During the first half of the stand, play a prey-distress sound.
If there’s a coyote within an earshot that is hungry or curious, you’ll get a response. If nothing responds halfway through your stand, switch categories to hopefully elicit a parental response. To do this, pick a sound from the coyote or coyote-pup distress category.
Let it play for the remainder of the stand. If there was a coyote within earshot, chances are one of the three triggers you tried to invoke will produce a response. 2 It’s late January and you’re headed out to call a piece of property that you’ve already hunted several times. By now, many of the coyotes have received some sort of education and are more concerned about repopulating than eating. During the first few minutes of the stand, use your favorite coyote vocalization sound. Next, switch sounds and pick something from the coyote and coyote-pup distress category.
Let that play through the halfway point of your stand and then repeat with coyote vocalizations and more coyote and coyote-pup distress. This accomplishes two things. First, you’ve played sounds from two different categories, which have the ability to invoke three of the four triggers, which are relative to the corresponding coyote behavior that time of year.
Second, you’ve played sounds that the average coyote hunter hasn’t used up to this point in the season. Identify the triggers that you want to invoke and then ring the right dinner bell!
Since animals are unable to talk, they normally communicate using a number of sounds. Are no different as they communicate using. Knowing the sounds and what they mean can help an individual understand them better. Woof It can be described as a low intensity, short range alarm and / or threat. A woof is a sound that parents usually make when they want to send their pups into cover or the den.
Growl The growl is a high intensity, short range threat. It is mainly used to warn another or of impending danger. Huff It is basically a high intensity, short range puff. Though it is not really one of the major sounds, it is classified as such. The huff is mainly produced by the rapid and forceful expulsion of air through the nose and mouth simultaneously. The resultant effect is blowing spit and snot in the face of the object that is currently giving them discontent. A rapid series is used to produce it that results with a chuffing sound.
Coyotes use it to ward off any unwanted advances from fellow coyotes or any other animal. Bark One of the common coyote sounds is the bark. It can be described as a high to low intensity, long range warning and / or threat. It is one of the leading controversial vocalizations among coyotes.
The bark is used for various reasons. One of the most common is to increase their sense of security especially when they are confronted by a smell, sight or sound that intimidates them. The bark will be used to ward off the unwanted item whether it has been identified or not. It is usually used before an attack or retreat depending on the size and scope of the threat. Yelp Can be described as a high intensity startle or submission response. Yelp is normally used when the coyote is surprised unpleasantly. In some cases, it is followed by a bark or attack depending on the cause of the yelp.
Puppy yelps are discerned to be more of a distress call than a startled response. Such coyote sounds are usually higher in intensity and longer in range than their adult counterparts.
Whine Last, but not least is the whine. It is mainly a high intensity, short range submission.
The whine is used to communicate various emotions. It can be used to communicate pain, hunger or distress. These are the major coyote sounds that have been researched and studied to date. MP3 Hunting Sounds for your.
Take advantage of that ecaller and use sounds from all the others and even some home made sounds that nobody in your area has played before. Why use something those coyotes already know, try something new and start bringing in those coyotes again. For details on downloading the sound files, go to main page and follow information at bottom of page.
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Closed as off-topic by, remyabel, Nov 11 '14 at 19:16 This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:. 'Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, and what has been done so far to solve it.' – bummi, Community, cpburnz, Colonel Thirty Two If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the, please.
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IMO It might be a better idea to write custom memory manager (the one that supports new/delete/malloc/free wrappers). Make a new/delete wrapper that locks unused/freed memory using VirtualProtect (yeah, I know that default allocation block will have to be PAGESIZE bytes large, and you'll need a lot of ram even for a small app, but that's the only disadvantage). If you are on linux, it probably have VirtualProtect alternative.
In this case any outrageous out-of-bounds access will generate access violation and will be easy to track. Also use stl containers when possible - they also offer bounds checking. This advice is based on experience - I had worked with a terribly written huge (several megabytes of code) old software that had memory leaks, accessed already freed memory from multiple threads and so on. I've spent week trying different utilities (purify, devpartner studio, aqtime etc), and although some of them provided loads of information, none were really helpful. With custom memory managment problems were eliminated in 2 days (that includes writing memory manager). If that doesn't work for you, try compuware devpartner studio - if it is still available anywhere.
@G Forty: You write custom memory manager that implements global operators new/delete. On startup manager grabs as much system RAM as it can (few gigabytes) and locks it up with virtualprotect (win32). When program requests new block, manager finds PAGESIZE aligned block, unlocks it and returns it to program. When the block is freed, it locks it up again using virtual protect. This way most attempt to access dangling pointer will cause immediate access violation which can be debugged and exterminated. There are no pointers to code.
Solution was written from scratch for commercial project. – Sep 20 '11 at 14:43. BoundsChecker is certainly not dead. 'It's only mostly dead, which means partly alive' (sorry, cannot resist the Miracle Max quote from The Princess Bride.) Seriously, BoundsChecker is alive and thriving under Micro Focus stewardship. We are releasing DevPartner Studio with 64-bit application support in BoundsChecker, the.NET/native/mixed performance and coverage profilers, and the.NET memory and holistic CPU/network/disk IO performance profiler. Look for DPS 10.5 to ship on February 4, 2011. The 10.5 release integrates seamlessly with Visual Studio 2005, 2008, and 2010, but you can still use BC standalone to run Active Check against VC6 and VC2003 binaries with some success if needed.
Shameless plug: I work on the DevPartner team. I am peppering SO with notes announcing the newfound relevance of DPS 10.5 for C and.NET app dev troubleshooting on the x64 platform. With the new pricing model where you can license just BC or just the perf profiler, DPS should be much more accessible than it ever was under Compuware stewardship and lofty pricing. Disclaimer: these are my own opinions not necessarily sanctioned by Micro Focus.