Tagged Questions
11
votes
15answers
4k views
What C/C++ tools can check for buffer overflows?
I've been asked to maintain a large C++ codebase full of memory leaks. While poking around, I found out that we have a lot of buffer overflows that lead to the leaks (how it got this bad, I don't ever ...
11
votes
11answers
945 views
What C/C++ functions are most often used incorrectly and can lead to buffer overflows?
I've been asked to maintain a large C++ codebase full of memory leaks. While poking around, I found out that we have a lot of buffer overflows that lead to the leaks (how it got this bad, I don't ever ...
5
votes
9answers
751 views
How do you program safely outside of a managed code environment?
If you are someone who programs in C or C++, without the managed-language benefits of memory management, type checking or buffer overrun protection, using pointer arithmetic, how do you make sure that ...
3
votes
6answers
567 views
How can I overcome inconsistent behaviour of snprintf in different UNIX-like operating systems?
Per man pages, snprintf is returning number of bytes written from glibc version 2.2 onwards. But on lower versions of libc2.2 and HP-UX, it returns a positive integer, which could lead to a buffer ...
2
votes
5answers
393 views
if one complains about gets(), why not do the same with scanf(“%s”,…)?
From man gets:
Never use gets(). Because it is
impossible to tell without knowing the
data in advance how many
characters gets() will read, and
because gets() will continue to store
...
1
vote
4answers
5k views
Confused by gdb print ptr vs print “%s”
1167 ptr = (void*)getcwd(cwd, MAX_PATH_LENGTH-1);
(gdb) n
1168 if (!ptr) {
(gdb) print ptr
$1 = 0xbff2d96c "/media/MMC-SD/partition1/aaaaaaaaaaa"
(gdb) print &cwd
$2 = (char (*)[3500]) ...