I'm writing my own shell, and seem to have some kind of problem with strcat() overwriting a string unexpectedly.
The problem is when trying to execute a file in the local directory. The second value in the path it should search is '.' and the first is /bin, but when appending the command to /bin for the absolute path to give to execlp()
the period is overwritten by the command as well. I know the MYPATH
thing is strange and that it's weird to separate by #s, but that is irrelevant to the issue.
I put some useful printf()
statements in if you want to run it to see what I'm talking about.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <readline/readline.h>
#include <readline/history.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
void execute(char**, int, char**, int);
int main (){
char *command, *mypath, *buffer, *arglist[1024], *pathlist[1024], **ap;
buffer = malloc(1024);
int loop = 1;
while (loop == 1){
int argnum = 0, pathnum = 0;
mypath = malloc(1024);
if(getenv("MYPATH") == NULL)
strcpy(mypath, "/bin#.");
else
strcpy(mypath, getenv("MYPATH"));
printf("myshell$ ");
command = readline("");
if(strcmp(command, "exit") == 0 || strcmp(command, "quit") == 0)
return 0;
if(strcmp(command, "") == 0)
continue;
/*Tokenizes Command*/
for(ap = arglist; (*ap = strsep(&command, " \t")) != NULL;){
argnum++;
if(**ap != '\0')
if(++ap >= &arglist[1024])
break;
}
/*Tokenizes Path*/
for(ap = pathlist; (*ap = strsep(&mypath, "#")) != NULL;){
pathnum++;
if(**ap != '\0')
if(++ap >= &pathlist[1024])
break;
}
execute(pathlist, pathnum, arglist, argnum);
}
return 0;
}
void execute(char *pathlist[], int pathnum, char *arglist[], int argnum){
pid_t pid;
int i;
int found = 0;
struct stat buf;
for(i = 0; i < pathnum; i++){
if (found == 1)
break;
printf("pathlist[0]: %s\n", pathlist[0]);
printf("pathlist[1]: %s\n", pathlist[1]);
strcat(pathlist[i], "/");
strcat(pathlist[i], arglist[0]);
printf("Pathlist[0] after strcat: %s\n", pathlist[0]);
printf("Pathlist[1] after strcat: %s\n", pathlist[1]);
if(stat(pathlist[i], &buf) == 0){
found = 1;
pid = fork();
if(pid == -1)
printf("Error: Fork Failed\n");
else if(pid == 0){
if(argnum == 0)
execlp(pathlist[i], arglist[0], (char *) NULL);
else if(argnum == 1)
execlp(pathlist[i], arglist[0], arglist[1], (char *) NULL);
else if(argnum == 2)
execlp(pathlist[i], arglist[0], arglist[1], arglist[2], (char *) NULL);
else if(argnum == 3)
execlp(pathlist[i], arglist[0], arglist[1], arglist[2], (char *) NULL);
}
else if(strcmp(arglist[argnum-1], "&") != 0){
wait(NULL);
}
}
else if(stat(pathlist[i], &buf) == -1 && i == pathnum-1 && found == 0)
printf("Error: Command '%s' not found.\n", arglist[0]);
}
}
execvp
function. Writing a differentexeclp
call for each possible number of arguments, while possible, is incredibly ugly and inefficient.