For my networking class, we're building a bittorrent client based off the UDP protocol, which is pretty cool but I'm having a ton of trouble with C strings for some reasons.
The first time I receive a packet, I do:
if(server_data == NULL){
server_data = malloc(one_block.total_blocks*sizeof(char*));
int i;
for(i = 0; i < one_block.total_blocks; i++){
server_data[i] = malloc(sizeof(char*));
server_data[i] = "";
}
}
Here, server_data is a char**
and one_block is struct
that holds packet information and the payload.
Next I do:
server_data[one_block.which_block] = one_block.payload;
blocks_rcv++;
if(blocks_rcv == one_block.total_blocks-1)
done = TRUE; //macro
if(done){
int i;
for(i = 0; i < one_block.total_blocks; i++){
printf("%s", server_data[i];
}
}
All seems well and dandy but for whatever insane reason when I print the contents of server_data before all the packets are received, I see different data from each packet. Afterwards I set done = TRUE and go into that for loop, every spot in the array contains the same string value.
I have no idea why this is happening and I really want to understand how from the beginning of the post to the end, the contents of the array change, even though I verify them through every iteration of the loop that reads in one packet at a time.
server_data[i] = ""; /* memory leak */
malloc(sizeof(char*));
you only allocate four or eight bytes.