I was coding a project and I came across a bug where QueryInterface()
was returning E_INVALIDARG
, I don't know which argument is invalid because both arguments are simple enough, am I overlooking something simple or what?
The bit that that is failing comes from Microsoft themselves specifically documentation, if I'm doing something totally wrong tell me
HRESULT CreateSecondaryBuffer(LPDIRECTSOUND8 lpDirectSound, LPDIRECTSOUNDBUFFER8* ppDsb8, LPCWSTR lpName) {
WAVEFORMATEX wfx;
DSBUFFERDESC dsbdesc;
LPDIRECTSOUNDBUFFER pDsb = NULL;
HRESULT hr = 0;
void* lpRes;
HRSRC hResInfo;
HGLOBAL hRes;
LPVOID lpvWrite;
DWORD dwLength;
waveFile myWave;
memset(&myWave, 0, sizeof(waveFile));
// Find the WAVE resource.
hResInfo = FindResource(wc.hInstance, lpName, L"WAVE");
if (hResInfo == NULL)
return FALSE;
// Load the WAVE resource.
hRes = LoadResource(wc.hInstance, hResInfo);
if (hRes == NULL)
return FALSE;
// Lock the WAVE resource and play it.
lpRes = LockResource(hRes);
char* wavMem = static_cast<char*>(lpRes);
memcpy(&myWave, wavMem, 36);
wavMem += 36;
while (myWave.Subchunk2ID[0] != 'd' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[1] != 'a' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[2] != 't' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[3] != 'a') {
memcpy(&myWave.Subchunk2ID, wavMem, 8);
if (myWave.Subchunk2ID[0] != 'd' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[1] != 'a' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[2] != 't' && myWave.Subchunk2ID[3] != 'a') {
wavMem += myWave.Subchunk2Size;
wavMem += 8;
}
}
wavMem += 8;
char* soundData = new char[myWave.Subchunk2Size];
memcpy(soundData, wavMem, myWave.Subchunk2Size);
FreeResource(hRes);
// Set up WAV format structure.
memset(&wfx, 0, sizeof(WAVEFORMATEX));
wfx.wFormatTag = WAVE_FORMAT_PCM;
wfx.nChannels = myWave.NumChannels;
wfx.nSamplesPerSec = myWave.SampleRate;
wfx.nBlockAlign = myWave.BlockAlign;
wfx.nAvgBytesPerSec = wfx.nSamplesPerSec * wfx.nBlockAlign;
wfx.wBitsPerSample = myWave.BitsPerSample;
// Set up DSBUFFERDESC structure.
memset(&dsbdesc, 0, sizeof(DSBUFFERDESC));
dsbdesc.dwSize = sizeof(DSBUFFERDESC);
dsbdesc.dwFlags =
DSBCAPS_CTRLVOLUME | DSBCAPS_GLOBALFOCUS;
dsbdesc.dwBufferBytes = myWave.Subchunk2Size;
dsbdesc.lpwfxFormat = &wfx;
hr = lpDirectSound->CreateSoundBuffer(&dsbdesc, &pDsb, NULL);
if (SUCCEEDED(hr))
{
if (DS_OK == pDsb->Lock(
0, // Offset at which to start lock.
0, // Size of lock; ignored because of flag.
&lpvWrite, // Gets address of first part of lock.
&dwLength, // Gets size of first part of lock.
NULL, // Address of wraparound not needed.
NULL, // Size of wraparound not needed.
DSBLOCK_ENTIREBUFFER)) // Flag.
{
memcpy(lpvWrite, soundData, dwLength);
pDsb->Unlock(
lpvWrite, // Address of lock start.
dwLength, // Size of lock.
NULL, // No wraparound portion.
0); // No wraparound size.
}
hr = pDsb->QueryInterface(IID_IDirectSoundBuffer8, (LPVOID*)ppDsb8);
pDsb->Release();
}
delete[] soundData;
return hr;
}
There are only 2 parameters to QueryInterface()
for E_INVALIDARG
to complain about, and offhand they look fine to me inside of your CreateSecondaryBuffer()
function. The 1st parameter is being passed a hard-coded IID, so the problem has to be with the 2nd parameter, which expects to be passed a pointer to (in this case) an IDirectSoundBuffer8*
variable that QueryInterface()
can write the memory address of a DirectSoundBuffer8
object into. So most likely, the ppDsb8
parameter of your CreateSecondaryBuffer()
function is not being passed a valid pointer to a IDirectSoundBuffer8*
variable, like you are expecting.
UPDATE: After seeing your added comment, you are indeed passing an invalid pointer to the ppDsb8
parameter of CreateSecondaryBuffer()
. The caller's pMainSecondaryBuffer
pointer is being declared incorrectly, and is uninitialized when passed to CreateSecondaryBuffer()
, so you are passing a bad pointer to QueryInterface()
, hence the E_INVALIDARG
error.
Use this instead:
LPDIRECTSOUND8 lpDevice = ...; // <-- make sure it points to a valid device object...
LPDIRECTSOUNDBUFFER8 pMainSecondaryBuffer;
CreateSecondaryBuffer(lpDevice, &pMainSecondaryBuffer, L"mainSong");