Get memory address of member function?

user541686 picture user541686 · Nov 14, 2011 · Viewed 35.6k times · Source

How do I get the absolute address of a member function in C++? (I need this for thunking.)

Member function pointers don't work because I can't convert them to absolute addresses (void *) -- I need to know the address of the actual function in memory, not simply the address relative to the type.

Answer

valdo picture valdo · Nov 14, 2011

There exists a syntax to get the address of the member function in MSVC (starting from MSVC 2005 IMHO). But it's pretty tricky. Moreover, the obtained pointer is impossible to cast to other pointer type by conventional means. Though there exists a way to do this nevertheless.

Here's the example:

// class declaration
class MyClass
{
public:
    void Func();
    void Func(int a, int b);
};

// get the pointer to the member function
void (__thiscall MyClass::* pFunc)(int, int) = &MyClass::Func;

// naive pointer cast
void* pPtr = (void*) pFunc; // oops! this doesn't compile!

// another try
void* pPtr = reinterpret_cast<void*>(pFunc); // Damn! Still doesn't compile (why?!)

// tricky cast
void* pPtr = (void*&) pFunc; // this works

The fact that conventional cast doesn't work, even with reinterpret_cast probably means that MS doesn't recommend this casting very strongly.

Nevertheless you may do this. Of course this is all implementation-dependent, you must know the appropriate calling convention to do the thunking + have appropriate assembler skills.