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I am trying to understand what is the correct way to use strnlen so that it will be used safely even considering edge cases.

Like for example having a non null-terminated string as input.

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

int main()
{
    void* data = malloc(5);

    size_t len = strnlen((const char*)data, 10);
    printf("len = %zu\n", len);

    return 0;
}

If I expect a string of max size 10, but the string does not contain the null character within those 10 characters strnlen will read out of bounds bytes (the input pointer may point to heap allocated data). Is this behavior undefined? If yes, is there a way to safely use strnlen to compute the length of a string which takes into account this type of scenario and does not lead to undefined behavior?

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  • 1
    How do you define your string's length when it's not NUL-terminated? Jul 11, 2018 at 14:00
  • 4
    To use strnlen(), the second argument needs to specify an upper limit of length. In your case, the call of strnlen() should not have a second argument exceeding 5. If you don't respect that, you will cause undefined behaviour, and there is no way around that.
    – Peter
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:04
  • The question is how to use strnlen and is tagged with C, not how to avoid strnlen and ditch C. Jul 11, 2018 at 14:04
  • The C-safe approach may be strnlen or memchr
    – Jose
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:04

3 Answers 3

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In order to use strnlen safely you need to

  1. Keep track of the size of the input buffer yourself (5 in your case) and pass that as the second parameter, not a number greater than that.

  2. Make sure the input pointer is not NULL.

  3. Make sure another thread is not writing to the buffer.

Formally, you don't need to initialise the contents of the buffer, as conceptually the function reads the buffer as if they are char types.

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This code will most likely invoke undefined behavior.

The bytes returned by malloc have indeterminate values. If there are no null bytes in the 5 bytes that are returned, then strnlen will read past those bytes since it was passed a max of 10, and reading past the end of allocated memory invokes undefined behavior.

Simply reading the bytes that were returned however should not be undefined. While indeterminate values could hold a trap representation, strnlen reads the bytes using a char *, and character types do not have trap representation, so the values are merely unspecified and reading them is safe.

If the value passed to strnlen is no larger than the size of allocated memory, then its usage is safe.

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  • 2
    Not so fast. The behaviour of reading uninitialised bytes char by char is not undefined. But indeed reading beyond the buffer is undefined.
    – Bathsheba
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:04
  • @Bathsheba True in theory, very much not true in practice; every compiler I have tested takes J.2 "The behavior is undefined if ... a value [of any type whatsoever, whether or not it has trap representations] is used while it is indeterminate" as normative, even though a close reading of the actual text does not go that far.
    – zwol
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:05
  • In this case it is undefined as the allocated block is 5 bytes and the strnlen max len is 10, therefore, that is a problem. Else if the maxlen is less than or equal to the allocated memory block length, then it should be fine.
    – phoxis
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:08
  • @Bathsheba: You are correct: " You're reading uninitialized bytes, " part is not correct.
    – phoxis
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:12
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Since the actual length of data is 5 and you most likely don't have a '\0' in there, it will start reading unallocated memory(starting at data[5]), which might be a little unpleasant.

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  • You've almost answered the first part of the question (Is this behavior undefined?), but not the main question (What's the correct way to use strnlen()?). So this doesn't really qualify as an answer, I'm afraid. Jul 11, 2018 at 15:04

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