19

Does anyone know a good safe way to redirect the output of a printf-style function to a string? The obvious ways result in buffer overflows.

Something like:

string s;
output.beginRedirect( s );  // redirect output to s

... output.print( "%s%d", foo, bar );

output.endRedirect();

I think the problem is the same as asking, "how many characters will print produce?" Ideas?

1
  • Just size_t nbytes = snprintf(NULL, 0, "%s", name) + 1; /* +1 for the '\0' */ char *str = malloc(nbytes); snprintf(str, nbytes, "%s", name);
    – Sherry869
    Aug 8, 2020 at 15:08

11 Answers 11

30

You can use:

std::snprintf if you are working with a char*

std::stringstream if you want to use strings (not same as printf but will allow you to easily manipulate the string using the normal stream functions).

boost::format if you want a function similar to printf that will work with streams. (as per jalf in comments)

fmt::format which is has been standardized since c++20 std::format

2
  • 3
    and boost::format to get printf-like formatting capabilities with C++ streams
    – jalf
    Jan 12, 2009 at 18:13
  • You can use std::snprintf if you are working with wchar_t* too, so long as you use mbstowcs_s to allocate the converted buffer. Oct 31, 2018 at 3:27
11

The snprintf() function prints to a string, but only as much as the length given to it.

Might be what you're looking for...

4
  • 1
    Faster than me. This is the old school way to do it. Jan 12, 2009 at 18:11
  • You can use sprintf that does not require a length. Also this will not work with strings as he asked...
    – Adam Peck
    Jan 12, 2009 at 18:12
  • 1
    @abyx - spot on! It'd be good to add an example for std::string, e.g. snprintf(target, SIZE, "%s%d", foo.c_str(), bar);
    – orip
    Jan 12, 2009 at 18:21
  • 1
    @Adam - sprintf is unsafe, and it's exactly what the poster asked how to avoid
    – orip
    Jan 12, 2009 at 18:22
9

The {fmt} library provides a safe printf implementation. For example, fmt::sprintf formats and returns a std::string:

std::string s = fmt::sprintf("%s%d", foo, bar);

If you are OK with a slightly different format string syntax you could also use C++20 std::format:

std::string s = std::format("{}{}", foo, bar);

Disclaimer: I'm the author of {fmt} and C++20 std::format.

5

Since you've tagged this as C++ (rather than just C), I'll point out that the typical way to do this sort of thing in C++ is to use stringstream, not the printf family. No need to worry about buffer overflows with stringstreams.

The Boost Format library is also available if you like printf-style format strings but want something safer.

1
  • +1 for Boost Format (beat me to it :)
    – orip
    Jan 12, 2009 at 18:22
5

snprintf() returns the number of bytes needed to write the whole string. So, as a tiny example:

#include <strings.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main(int argc, char** argv) 
{
    char* buf = 0;
    size_t bufsize = 0;
    size_t sz;

    const char* format="%s and %s.";
    const char* str_1 ="string 1";
    const char* str_2 ="string 2";

    sz = snprintf(buf, bufsize, format, str_1, str_2);
    printf("The buffer needs to be %d bytes.\n", sz);

    buf=malloc(sz+1);
    if(!buf) {
        printf("Can't allocate buffer!\n");
        return 1;
    }
    bufsize = sz+1;
    buf[bufsize-1] = '\0';
    sz = snprintf(buf, bufsize, format, str_1, str_2);
    printf("Filled buffer with %d bytes.\n", sz);
    printf("The buffer contains:\n'%s'\n", buf);
    return 0;
}

output:

The buffer needs to be 22 bytes.
Filled buffer with 22 bytes.
The buffer contains:
'string 1 and string 2.'
4

This StackOverflow question has a similar discussion. Also in that question I present my favorite solution, a "format" function that takes identical arguments to printf and returns a std::string.

4

Old school:

snprintf()

allows you to put a limit on the number written, and return the actual written size, and

asprintf()

allocate (with malloc()) a sufficient buffer which then becomes your problem to free(). `asprintf is a GNU libc function now reimplemented in the BSD libc.

1

With C99 you have the snprintf-function which takes the size of the buffer as a parameter. The GNU C-library has asprintf which allocates a buffer for you. For c++ though, you might be better of using iostream.

Wikipedia has more info.

1

I find the printf formatting to be very helpful and easier to use than streams. On the other hand, I do like std::string a lot too. The solution is to use sprintf, but that cannot handle arbitrary buffer size.

I've found that I need to handle common case (say, buffer limited to 256 chars) w/o overhead, and yet handle the large buffer safely. To do that, I have a buffer of 256 chars alocated in my class as a member, and I use snprinf, passing that buffer and its size. If snprintf succeeds, I can immediately retunr the formatted string. If it fails, I allocate the buffer and call snprinf again. The buffer is deallocated in the class' destructor.

0

On Windows:

StringCchPrintf
StringCbPrintf

from strsafe.h/lib.

-1

Microsoft introduce the 'safe' crt functions for this.

You could use printf_s()

2
  • 4
    Not available on any other standards conforming implementation, so yuck.
    – Bklyn
    Jan 12, 2009 at 22:18
  • Also, the only difference is that the "safe" crt will crash themselves if they detect certain undefined behaviors. That doesn't bypass the issue he's encountering. Aug 19, 2014 at 19:47

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