3

I have written a program to anagram string using strfry. It works greatly with default standard input, but crashes when used with stdio redirection(functions, but segfaults at the end):

#include "stdio.h"
#include "stdlib.h"
#include "string.h"
#include "sys/mman.h"

int main(int argc,char *argv[]) {
    FILE *fryend=stdin;
    if (argc==1) goto mainloop;
    if (argc>1) fryend=fopen(argv[1],"r") ? fryend : stdin;

    mainloop:;
    char *buf=malloc(4096);
    while (!ferror(fryend)) {
        memset(buf,0,4096);
        strfry(fgets(buf,4095,fryend));
        fputs(buf,stdout);
    }
    free(buf);
    if (fryend!=stdin) fclose(fryend);
    return 0;
}

What is wrong here? Used GNU libc/GCC. Run through valgrind and no memory leak detected.

5
  • 2
    Your fgets call works always on stdin. If fryend is a file, you should fclose it, otherwise Valgrind will complain. I'm not sure how strfry behaves on NULL input. I think it is cleaner to separate the fgets and strfry calls and check for NULL.
    – M Oehm
    Dec 7, 2014 at 9:18
  • 1
    As a side note: Having a failed fopen silently fall back to stdin is not a good design, in my opinion.
    – M Oehm
    Dec 7, 2014 at 9:19
  • @M Oehm:It is a stdio filter, like rev, so it is reasonable to have fall back to stdin. Dec 7, 2014 at 9:37
  • 1
    Well, maybe. With all the changes you have made to the original code in the meantime, do you still observe the same behaviour?
    – M Oehm
    Dec 7, 2014 at 9:44
  • Good observation. Changing fgets(buf,4095,stdin) into fgets(buf,4095,fryend) should have made a difference....
    – wimh
    Dec 7, 2014 at 9:47

3 Answers 3

1

Rewrite this line

if (argc>1) fryend=fopen(argv[1],"r") ? fryend : stdin;

without the conditional operator.

Maybe something like

if (argc > 1) {
    FILE *tmp = fopen(argv[1], "r");
    if (tmp) fryend = tmp;
}
0

fgets returns NULL when the end of the file has been reached. You should use this return value rather than calls to ferror or feof to control your loop. You should also be careful not to pass NULL pointers to string functions. They might handle this gracefully, but usually don't.

So your loop should look like:

while (fgets(buf, 4096, fryend)) {
    strfry(buf);
    fputs(buf, stdout);
}

I've thrown out the memset, because the result of fgets is null-terminated and will not overflow the buffer, so you can pass the full 4096 byte length.

0

When redirecting stdin

a.out <test.txt

fgets() might return NULL.

From man fgets():

RETURN VALUE

[...] fgets() return[s] [...] NULL on error or when end of file occurs while no characters have been read.

In turn NULL gets passed to strfry(),

strfry(fgets(buf, 4095, fryend));

which isn't a good idea.

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