My Win* C/C++ application crashes in the Berkeley DB library when Berkeley DB calls
fprintf (or some other standard C library function).
You should be using the "Debug Multithreaded DLL" compiler option in
your application when you link with the
build_win32/Debug/libdb32d.lib library (this .lib file
is actually a stub for libdb32d.DLL). To check this
setting in Visual C++, choose the "Project/Settings" menu item, and
under the tab marked "C/C++", select "Code Generation" and see the box
marked "Use runtime library". This should be set to "Debug
Multithreaded DLL". If your application is linked against the static
library, build_win32/Debug/libdb32sd.lib, then you
will want to set "Use runtime library" to "Debug Multithreaded".
Setting this option incorrectly can cause multiple versions of the
standard libraries to be linked into your application (one on behalf
of your application, and one on behalf of the Berkeley DB library). That
violates assumptions made by these libraries, and traps can result.
Why are the build options for DB_DLL marked as "Use MFC in a Shared DLL"?
Does Berkeley DB use MFC?
Berkeley DB does not use MFC at all. It does however, call malloc and free and
other facilities provided by the Microsoft C runtime library. We've found
in our work that many applications and libraries are built assuming MFC,
and specifying this for Berkeley DB solves various interoperation issues, and
guarantees that the right runtime libraries are selected. Note that since
we do not use MFC facilities, the MFC library DLL is not marked as a
dependency for libdb.dll, but the appropriate Microsoft C runtime is.