The primary issue you were having is you were not allocating space for the struct
itself and then were not allocating enough memory for key
and value
.
Additionally Always check to see if your allocation succeeded. Otherwise you risk Undefined Behavior writing to memory not allocated to your struct.
Lastly, when you allocate memory, you are responsible for keeping track of it and freeing it when you are done. Here is a short example with your code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
/* provide some minimum size that will hold keys & values */
#define MAXS 32
typedef struct {
char *key;
char *value;
} configParam;
void loadSettings(char *fileName, configParam *paramsReaded, int *length, int *statusCode)
{
strcpy (paramsReaded->key,"key_from_txt"); /* or just use strdup and do away */
strcpy (paramsReaded->value,"value_from_txt"); /* with your initialization */
}
void initialization(configParam *paramsReaded)
{
paramsReaded->key = malloc (MAXS * sizeof (char));
paramsReaded->value = malloc (MAXS * sizeof (char));
/* always check your allocation succeeded */
if (!paramsReaded->key || !paramsReaded->value) {
fprintf (stderr, "error: memory allocation failed.\n");
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
}
int main()
{
configParam *parametersReaded = malloc (sizeof *parametersReaded); /* allocate at least 1 */
/* always check your allocation succeeded */
if (!parametersReaded) {
fprintf (stderr, "error: memory allocation failed.\n");
return 1;
}
initialization (parametersReaded);
char ruta[] = "config.txt";
int length = 5;
int statusCodeee = 0;
loadSettings (ruta, parametersReaded,&length,&statusCodeee);
// getchar();
printf ("\n key : %s\n value: %s\n\n", parametersReaded->key, parametersReaded->value);
/* free allocated memory (note: checks are not required
if you insure your pointers have not been freed earlier
in your code.) A simple free (pointer) will suffice. */
if (parametersReaded->key) free (parametersReaded->key);
if (parametersReaded->value) free (parametersReaded->value);
if (parametersReaded) free (parametersReaded);
return 0;
}
Output
$ ./bin/initstruct
key : key_from_txt
value: value_from_txt
Note: do not cast the result of malloc
. It just invites hard to find errors. paramsReaded->key = malloc (MAXS * sizeof (char));
is sufficient.
Check for Memory Leaks/Errors
If you are just beginning to allocate memory dynamically, make sure you confirm your memory use with a memory checker such as valgrind
or similar tool on windows. They are simple to use, simply run your code through them. They will confirm your memory reads and writes do not involve errors (writing beyond your allocated space) and confirm that you have adequately freed all memory you allocated:
$ valgrind ./bin/initstruct
==6475== Memcheck, a memory error detector
==6475== Copyright (C) 2002-2012, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
==6475== Using Valgrind-3.8.1 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
==6475== Command: ./bin/initstruct
==6475==
key : key_from_txt
value: value_from_txt
==6475==
==6475== HEAP SUMMARY:
==6475== in use at exit: 0 bytes in 0 blocks
==6475== total heap usage: 3 allocs, 3 frees, 80 bytes allocated
==6475==
==6475== All heap blocks were freed -- no leaks are possible
==6475==
==6475== For counts of detected and suppressed errors, rerun with: -v
==6475== ERROR SUMMARY: 0 errors from 0 contexts (suppressed: 2 from 2)
malloc
orcalloc
) space for the pointer array:configParam *parametersReaded[]
I would suggest something likeconfigParam **parametersReaded = calloc (10, sizeof *parametersReaded);
(or how ever many you need)struct configParam
should beconfigParam
(or, alternatively, the struct should be defined asstruct configParam {
):p
.c
file (implementation file).