the xml_archive does detect these errors.  For me that the only real use for xml_archives.
 
Robert Ramey
"Dan Eaton" <daniel.eaton@acceleware.com> wrote in message news:AD3E5D661CED404A842D89A45C87D5661654313E1E@axe-post.Acceleware.local...

Hello,

I'm just wondering if NVP/XML archives check the name during deserialization?

 

I just had a problem whereby I tried deserializing an object to one type, but the archive actually contained a different (larger ) object type. The first serialized element of the object just so happened to be an unsigned int, and I was trying to deserialize an enum, so the output actually seemed sensible, and didn't cause any problems until I later deserialized the full object from the same archive, which caused a segmentation fault in the boost::serialize source (trying to get ETI from a null pointer).

 

I was using a polymorphic text archive, and as I mentioned above, am wondering if I switched to an XML archive if this sort of user-error would be detected.

 

Thanks,

 

Dan Eaton
Software Developer
Acceleware Corp. (TSX-V:AXE) www.acceleware.com

 

Phone: +1.403.249.9099 Ext.295
Fax: +1.403.249.9881
Email: daniel.eaton@acceleware.com

 

 

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