Just for fun, I changed by code back to cause the crash again.  Now it’s 
difficult to reproduce but here is the part of the callstack showing where the 
issue occurs.  The CPLCleanupTLSList function is the function of interest as it 
loops over some type of list.  Within a conditional it is adding two numbers 
together in an array offset and testing a pointer to determine whether to free 
some memory.  This is far down into the weeds of GDAL so I’ve no idea what this 
function is doing but it’s above my level of understanding of GDAL internals.  
We don’t attempt to use any networking capabilities within GDAL as far as I 
know.  When I get it to crash again I’ll step into it some more to see if 
something jumps out at me.

#0  0x00007fc79b81e241 in unlink_chunk.isra () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#1  0x00007fc79b81e465 in malloc_consolidate () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#2  0x00007fc79b81fae0 in _int_free () from /lib64/libc.so.6
#3  0x00007fc792ab9708 in VSIFree (pData=0x9bfd40) at cpl_vsisimple.cpp:873
#4  0x00007fc792a78820 in CPLCleanupTLSList (papTLSList=0x7ab950) at 
cpl_multiproc.cpp:467
#5  0x00007fc792a799ec in CPLCleanupTLS () at cpl_multiproc.cpp:2247
#6  0x00007fc79252667c in GDALDriverManager::~GDALDriverManager (this=0x848ae0, 
__in_chrg=<optimized out>) at gdaldrivermanager.cpp:274
#7  0x00007fc792526746 in GDALDriverManager::~GDALDriverManager (this=0x848ae0, 
__in_chrg=<optimized out>) at gdaldrivermanager.cpp:335
#8  0x00007fc792527989 in GDALDestroyDriverManager () at 
gdaldrivermanager.cpp:915
#9  0x00007fc792520fce in GDALDestroy () at gdaldllmain.cpp:86

Shawn Fox
From: Andrew Bell <andrew.bell...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, September 18, 2024 5:50 PM
To: Fox, Shawn D (US) <shawn....@baesystems.us>
Cc: gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [gdal-dev] Call to GDALDestroy results in occasional core dump, 
GDAL 3.4.2

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On Wed, Sep 18, 2024 at 8:32 PM Fox, Shawn D (US) via gdal-dev 
<gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org>> wrote:
In our case we have a singleton class that acts as a façade and all of our 
calls to GDAL Apis are done by the methods of this class.  The rest of our code 
base only interacts with the singleton so that we only have one project that 
actually depends directly on the GDAL library.  Since the _instance member is a 
static smart pointer the destructor of our class and the GDALDestroy function 
is being called after the main function exits.

This is not a great plan unless you understand exactly the order of things 
being destroyed, which is not well-defined between compilation units unless you 
have done things to guarantee it. It seems likely that GDALDestroy() is 
attempting to free things already destroyed during program tear-down. Since 
your program is exiting, I can't imagine you need to call GDALDestroy() at all. 
 You could also eliminate this issue by instantiating your GDAL class-thingee 
as the first line of your program rather than as a static.

--
Andrew Bell
andrew.bell...@gmail.com<mailto:andrew.bell...@gmail.com>
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