I am trying reverse a string.

This is the code I tried:

#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>

int main(){
    char *c="I am a good boy";
    printf("\n The input string is : %s\n",c);
    printf("\n The length of the string is : %d\n",strlen(c));
    int i,j;
    char temp;
    int len=strlen(c);
    for(i=0,j=len-1;i<=j;i++,j--)
    {
            temp=c[i];
            c[i]=c[j];
            c[j]=temp;
    //printf("%c\t%c\n",*(c+i),*(c+(len-i-1)));
    }
    printf("\n reversed string is : %s\n\n",c);
}

The code outputs a Bus error : 10.

But if I rewrite the same code as:

int main(void)
{
    char *str;
    str="I am a good boy";
    int i,j;
    char temp;
    int len=strlen(str);
    char *ptr=NULL;
    ptr=malloc(sizeof(char)*(len));
    ptr=strcpy(ptr,str);
    for (i=0, j=len-1; i<=j; i++, j--)
    {
        temp=ptr[i];
        ptr[i]=ptr[j];
        ptr[j]=temp;
    }
    printf("The reverse of the string is : %s\n",ptr);
}

It works perfectly fine.

Why is the first code throwing bus error or segmentation fault?

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1  
please reformat your code. – Daniel A. White Sep 18 '11 at 1:04
I tried formatting as much as possible, but i really dont know how to have them aligned. – sethu Sep 18 '11 at 1:07
1  
Please format your code by indenting it all with four spaces. – SLaks Sep 18 '11 at 1:08
1  
In the future, highlight all your code, then click the {} icon. – Matthew Flaschen Sep 18 '11 at 1:14
1  
@sethu: Be sure to look at the source of the question as it is now to see how you should format your code for the site. All it takes is pasting your code in, selecting it and pressing Ctrl + K to indent it all with 4 spaces. That alone should be sufficient. – Jeff Mercado Sep 18 '11 at 1:14
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5 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

The bus error occurs because in many (if not most or all modern) C compilers, string literals are allocated in read-only memory.

You are reversing the string in place. In your first code snippet you are trying to write into a string literal. Not a good idea.

In the second case, you malloc'd a string which put it on the heap. It is now safe to reverse that string in place.

ADDENDUM

To the commenter who asked about segfaults versus bus errors, that is a great question. I have seen both. Here is a bus error on a mac:

$ cat bus.c 
char* s = "abc"; int main() {s[0]='d'; return 0;}

$ gcc --version bus.c && ./a.out
i686-apple-darwin10-gcc-4.2.1 (GCC) 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5659)
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Bus error

On other operating systems/compilers you may indeed get a segfault.

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I thought trying to write read-only memory would cause a segfault, not a bus error? Or is that OS-specific? – cHao Sep 18 '11 at 1:15
I've seen both! – Ray Toal Sep 18 '11 at 1:16
You must be doing some wacky stuff over there. :) Only time i've ever seen a bus error, the motherboard was bad. – cHao Sep 18 '11 at 1:18
1  
@cHao, writing to a string literal is undefined (see my previous answer on this), so a segfault, bus error, and far weirder things are all allowed. – Matthew Flaschen Sep 18 '11 at 1:19
+1 @Matthew for pointing out what the standard says. Perfect description of why both are possible. – Ray Toal Sep 18 '11 at 1:29
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Copying it to the heap is one option. However, if you just want to allocate a local (stack) array, you can do:

char str[] = "I am a good boy";

Then, the constant string will be copied to the stack.

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Character arrays specified in form of "I am a good boy" are usually constant - you can't modify them. That's why your first variant crashes. The second doesn't, as you make a copy of data and then modify it.

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char *str = "I am a good boy"; Treated as literal and trying to modify it will result in bus error. It is equivalent to const char *str = "I am a good boy", i.e. pointer to a constant string and trying to modify a constant string is not allowed.

EDIT : The moment you malloc() and copy you are playing with a copy of the original string and ptr is not of 'const char *' type, instead it is 'char *ptr' and does not complain.

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Compiling with c++ (g++) shows the deprecation of assigning a string literal to a non-const char* which is designed to prevent this error:

ed@bad-horse:~/udlit_debug$ g++ ../buserr.cpp 
../buserr.cpp: In function ‘int main()’:
../buserr.cpp:5:13: warning: deprecated conversion from string constant to ‘char*’
../buserr.cpp:7:61: warning: format ‘%d’ expects type ‘int’, but argument 2 has type ‘size_t’

The relevant warning is on line 5.

Changing the declaration to const char * as indicated prevents the assignments into the literal string.

This is also a lesson on why you should not ignore warnings.

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