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I have a while loop inside a for loop to handle strings. Here is basically the structure of my code:

char myString[1000];
//Initialize and maybe change myString
for(/*conditions*/){
    while(/*conditions*/){
        if(strchr(myString,' ') == NULL){
            break;
        }
        char *temp = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(myString));
        strcpy(temp,myString);
        *strchr(temp,' ') = '\0';
        strcat(myString," ");
        strcat(myString,temp);
        free(temp);
    }
}

Sometimes, this code works just fine, but sometimes the process ends and returns 3 which means that there is an error (3 is the return value that I usually get when I try to use NULL where I shouldn't like for example myPointer->example where myPointer is NULL). After some tests, I found out that the line that was causing the problem is free(temp);. I tried to replace it with if(temp != NULL){free(temp);} but it didn't change anything. I tried to declare temp with char temp[1000] instead of malloc and take away the free(temp); line but it still does the same thing. If I take away the free(temp); line and still use malloc the problem is solved but instead there is a huge memory leak, so I can't do that. If there is an error or not depends on what is in the myString string, which means that if there is a certain value in there, there always is an error, and if there is another certain value, there never is an error, but I can't manage to find out what type of values work and which ones don't, it seems to be random.

Why does free(temp); sometimes work and sometimes not and how can I get it to always work?

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  • 5
    char *temp = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(myString)); strcpy(temp,myString); out-of-bounds write, undefined behavior. Also, undefined behavior for NULL-dereference if strchr() returns NULL.
    – EOF
    Aug 8, 2016 at 14:43
  • Also, sizeof( char ) is one by definition, thus it's redundant as part of the argument passed to malloc(). Aug 8, 2016 at 14:59
  • I'm voting to close this question because the problem was caused by a simple typo.
    – anon
    Jul 6, 2017 at 19:24

1 Answer 1

5

The major problem is, you're allocating one element less than the required memory.

strlen() does not account for the terminating null, so you're one short of the required memory. Later, doing

strcpy(temp,myString);

is actually out of bound access (to store the terminating null) which invokes undefined behavior. As a result, you get to see

Sometimes, this code works just fine, but sometimes the process ends and returns 3 which means that there is an error[....]

To resolve, you should modify the allocation statement like

char *temp = malloc(strlen(myString) + 1); // +1 for terminating null,
                                           // sizeof(char) == 1, guaranteed by C standard.

That said, from the man page

The strchr() and strrchr() functions return a pointer to the matched character or NULL if the character is not found. [...]

and, for the highlighted scenario,

*strchr(temp,' ') = '\0';

attempts to dereference a null-pointer constant (NULL) which is invalid and again, invokes UB. Check for a valid return value before dereferecing the returned pointer

6
  • .... and in case of UB any expected or unexpected result can take place.
    – haccks
    Aug 8, 2016 at 14:44
  • @haccks Right sir, just quoted the part from the question to make this relevant. :) Aug 8, 2016 at 14:45
  • @DonaldDuck check the edit in the answer, if problem persists, please create a MCVE. Aug 8, 2016 at 14:50
  • @SouravGhosh I already dealt with that in the beginning with if(strchr(myString,' ') == NULL){break;}. So strchr(test,' ') shouldn't be NULL since at that point test and myString are the same and if there isn't any space in myString it exits the while loop.
    – anon
    Aug 8, 2016 at 14:52
  • @DonaldDuck makes sense, striked that option out. Aug 8, 2016 at 15:08