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I am copying data in Gateway (contains the string Oct/10/12) to dest_data but dest_datais getting more characters than the source:

unsigned_8   *dest_data
int_16 len;      

len = (int_16)strlen( Gateway ); // len got 9 correctly
(void)memcpy( dest_data, GatewayApplicationRlsDate, len );

The final output of dest_data is "Oct/10/1210.1.3"

Do I have to clean the dest_data before copying?

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  • 3
    Is this really C++, or is (as it looks) C?
    – hmjd
    Oct 30, 2012 at 15:15
  • On a semi-relate note, why do you store the string length in a 16-bit integer? strlen() returns size_t and memcpy() accepts a size_t. There's no need to cast, AFAICS. What does casting to something other than size_t buy you? Oct 30, 2012 at 22:08

5 Answers 5

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You copy your string content, but not the terminating null character. Add one to len, and you should be fine. But the proper solution would be to use strcpy(), which copies the trailling null character automatically.

Also, think to allocate memory for dest_data (malloc((len + 1) * sizeof(*dest_data));)

unsigned_8   *dest_data;
int_16 len;      

len = (int_16)strlen( Gateway ) + 1; 
dest_data = malloc(len * sizeof(*dest_data));
(void)strcpy( dest_data, GatewayApplicationRlsDate );
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  • 2
    There is no such thing as a NULL character. Oct 30, 2012 at 15:21
  • Use of strncpy is safer programming practice. strcpy is vulnerable to buffer overflow exploits. Oct 30, 2012 at 15:31
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    If strlen has just been used to determine the length, why would the 'proper' solution be strcpy? strcpy has to look at each character it copies to check for \0, but you already know where the \0 is so you are just wasting cycles. memcpy(dest, date, len+1) is perfect. Oct 30, 2012 at 15:48
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No memory has been allocated for dest_data (it is an uninitialised pointer) and the memcpy() is not copying the null terminator. Allocate len + 1 bytes of memory for dest_data and copy len + 1 to also copy the null terminator.

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You need to copy len + 1 bytes

At the moment you forget to copy the null terminator \0.

When you try to acces the copy, the string functions search untill they find a \0 which could be anywhere.

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Shouldn't your strlen use the length from the GatewayApplicationRlsDate?

ie:

len = (int_16)strlen( GatewayApplicationRlsDate );

0

You should use strcpy, this will also copy the trailing null byte.

strcpy( dest_data, GatewayApplicationRlsDate );

Of course all the caveats about handling raw pointers apply. Really you should probably be using std::string or std::vector<char>.

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