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_ATL_DEBUG_INTERFACES

Define this macro before including any ATL header files to trace all AddRef and Release calls on your components' interfaces to the output window.

#define _ATL_DEBUG_INTERFACES

Remarks

The trace output will appear as shown below:

ATL: QIThunk - 2008 AddRef : Object = 0x00d81ba0 Refcount = 1 CBug - IBug

The first part of each trace will always be ATL: QIThunk. Next is a value identifying the particular interface thunk being used. An interface thunk is an object used to maintain a reference count and provide the tracing capability used here. A new interface thunk is created on every call to QueryInterface except for requests for the IUnknown interface (in this case, the same thunk is returned every time to comply with COM's identity rules).

Next you'll see AddRef or Release indicating which method was called. Following that, you'll see a value identifying the object whose interface reference count was changed. The value traced is the this pointer of the object.

The reference count that is traced is the reference count on that thunk after AddRef or Release was called. Note that this reference count may not match the reference count for the object. Each thunk maintains its own reference count to help you fully comply with COM's reference-counting rules.

The final piece of information traced is the name of the object and the interface being affected by the AddRef or Release call.

Any interface leaks that are detected when the server shuts down and _Module.Term is called will be logged like this:

ATL: QIThunk - 2005 LEAK : Object = 0x00d81ca0 Refcount = 1 MaxRefCount = 1 CBug - IBug

The information provided here maps directly to the information provided in the previous trace statements, so you can examine the reference counts throughout the whole lifetime of an interface thunk. In addition, you get an indication of the maximum reference count on that interface thunk.

Hinweis

_ATL_DEBUG_INTERFACES can be used in retail builds.

Tips

  • You can see when a new interface thunk is created by looking for AddRef calls with a Refcount of 1.

  • You can see when an interface thunk is destroyed by looking for Release calls with a Refcount of 0.

  • The trace statements are output in a tab-separated format so you can easily cut and paste the information into a spreadsheet such as Microsoft Excel to provide advanced filtering, searching, and sorting capabilities.

  • If your code seems to work fine when _ATL_DEBUG_INTERFACES is not defined, but causes access violations when the macro is defined, you almost certainly have a mismatched reference-counting bug in your client code, similar to the one shown below:

    IBug* pBug = NULL;
    hr = p->QueryInterface(&pBug);
    ATLASSERT(SUCCEEDED(hr));
    IBug* pBug2 = NULL;
    hr = p->QueryInterface(&pBug2);
    ATLASSERT(SUCCEEDED(hr));
    pBug->Release();
    pBug->Release();    // Mismatched - should be pBug2->Release();   
    

    This code may appear to work under some common circumstances, but it is clearly buggy. For this code to work at all, it relies on implementation details of the COM object providing the IBug interface (IBug cannot be implemented as a tear-off interface) and it is location-dependent (the client must be in the same apartment as the IBug implementation). Use of the _ATL_DEBUG_INTERFACES macro can bring such bugs to light.

See Also

Concepts

Debugging and Error Reporting Macros

ATL Macros