void print( char * str ){ printf("%s",str); }
void some_function(){
... Loads a file into `char * buffer` ...
... Stores the function print before `buffer` address ...
((void(*)(void))buffer();
}
In the file, there is a "Hello World" in it, and some unreadable characters. Executing the buffer will print "Hello World".
I know you can execute a pointer like this:
void (*foo)(int) = &bar; // such that void bar(int)
(*foo)(123);
But executing void(int) function as a void(void) function with its function and parameters in memory is new to me.
Is there a standard of how a function look like in memory (like a string is terminated by a null character) such that you can execute it in this way?
standard
for how a function looks in memory. Read this, please: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assembly_language It may give you more understanding how all this stuff is organized.char * getargs(int)
, stores getargs into a specific address, and execute the cmd. I am stuck at executing the cmd, and I thought this question might help. I doubt it's going to besystem(input_string)
. Sounds too easy for a graduate level course and does not justify the existence of getargs and everything stored in memory