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.
fgets
call works always onstdin
. Iffryend
is a file, you shouldfclose
it, otherwise Valgrind will complain. I'm not sure howstrfry
behaves onNULL
input. I think it is cleaner to separate thefgets
andstrfry
calls and check forNULL
.fopen
silently fall back tostdin
is not a good design, in my opinion.rev
, so it is reasonable to have fall back tostdin
.fgets(buf,4095,stdin)
intofgets(buf,4095,fryend)
should have made a difference....