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?
strnlen()
, the second argument needs to specify an upper limit of length. In your case, the call ofstrnlen()
should not have a second argument exceeding5
. If you don't respect that, you will cause undefined behaviour, and there is no way around that.strnlen
and is tagged with C, not how to avoidstrnlen
and ditch C.strnlen
ormemchr