1

I don't understand why these pointer values seem to be correct, but the values I am trying to get out of them are not. (I studied C a long time ago, and I am recently trying to get back into it for fun).

Here is a working example of the problem I am facing, but I am not sure what I am doing wrong - am I casting the pointers incorrectly, not correctly managing memory, or something else.

#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

#define Q_STACK_MAX 100

typedef struct
{
    void* value[Q_STACK_MAX];
    int top;
} Stack;


void push(Stack* S, void* val)
{
    S->value[S->top] = val; 
    (S->top)++;
}

void* pop(Stack* S)
{
    (S->top)--;
    return (S->value[S->top]);
}

void init(Stack* S)
{
    S->top = 0;
}

int full(Stack* S)
{
    return (S->top >= Q_STACK_MAX);
}


void recursive_dir(char* dir, char* search, Stack* S)
{
    DIR* dp;
    struct dirent* entry;
    struct stat statbuf;
    if((dp = opendir(dir)) == NULL) {
        fprintf(stderr, "error: %s\n", dir);
        return;
    }

    chdir(dir);
    while((entry = readdir(dp)) != NULL) {
        lstat(entry->d_name, &statbuf);

        if(S_ISDIR(statbuf.st_mode)) {
            if(strcmp(".", entry->d_name) == 0 ||
                strcmp("..", entry->d_name) == 0)
                    continue;

            recursive_dir(entry->d_name, search, S);
        } else {
            if( strstr(entry->d_name, search) != NULL ) {
                if(!full(S)) push(S, (void *)entry);

                printf("%p\n", entry);
                printf("%s [%x]\n", entry->d_name, entry->d_ino);
            } 
        }
    }
    chdir("..");
    closedir(dp);
}

int main() {
    Stack S;
    init(&S);
    int i;

    printf("\n");
    recursive_dir("/etc/", "conf", &S);
    printf("\n------------------------------\n");

    int top = S.top;
    struct dirent* entry;
    for (i=0; i<top; i++)
    {
        //struct dirent* entry = (struct dirent*)pop(&S);
        entry = (struct dirent*)S.value[i];

        printf("%p\n", entry);
        printf("%s [%x]\n", entry->d_name, entry->d_ino); 
    }

    printf("\n");

    return 0;
}

What this outputs are the pointer values to the dirent structures, the file name that is within that structure, and the file serial number. It then tries to cast the pointer to that direct to a (void*) and store it in a makeshift stack.

Later, I try to iterate over the values in the stack (well the array), cast it back to a dirent and then display the same information.

This works sometimes and doesn't work other times. A trimmed output example:

...
0x7ff831806360
httpd-multilang-errordoc.conf [2cb6e07]
0x7ff831806398
httpd-ssl.conf [2cb6e08]
0x7ff8318063c0
httpd-userdir.conf [2cb6e09]
0x7ff8318063ec
httpd-vhosts.conf [2cb6e0a]
0x7ff831805250
httpd.conf [2cb6e0b]
0x7ff831805274
httpd.conf~previous [187a3]
0x7ff831807230
httpd-autoindex.conf [2cb6e10]
0x7ff831807260
httpd-dav.conf [2cb6e11]
0x7ff831807288
httpd-default.conf [2cb6e12]
0x7ff8318072b4
httpd-info.conf [2cb6e13]
...
--------------------------
...
0x7ff831807360
httpd-multilang-errordoc.conf [2cb6e17]
0x7ff831807398
httpd-ssl.conf [2cb6e18]
0x7ff8318073c0
httpd-userdir.conf [2cb6e19]
0x7ff8318073ec
httpd-vhosts.conf [2cb6e1a]
0x7ff831806250
 [0]
0x7ff831806230
320.whatis [2cb6ff6]
0x7ff8318042bc
asl.conf [2cb7d07]
0x7ff83180437c
autofs.conf [2cb6f5f]
0x7ff831805250
 [0]
0x7ff831805274
??$ [61666564]
0x7ff8318052e0
_response [6e7261]
...

Sometimes everything seems correct, and other times the file handle and / or the name are completely wacked out.

Generally when I see something like that it is because I am not doing something with memory correctly - having lived in the garbage collection world for so long I wouldn't be surprised that was it, but I am not sure why or how.

Any help would be appreciated.

(I've been coding for quite a number of year, I've just been out of the C arena for quite a while. Please go easy on me.)

6
  • 1
    "I studied C a long time ago, and I am recently trying to get back into it for fun" - there are many things that are much more fun than programming in C.
    – LihO
    Mar 8, 2013 at 23:24
  • @LihO True, but you can only eat and drink so much. Mar 8, 2013 at 23:27
  • If you know that you are going to store pointers to struct dirent, why did you declare it as void* value[Q_STACK_MAX]; then? I mean why void*?
    – LihO
    Mar 8, 2013 at 23:31
  • The pointer returned by readdir may be statically allocated, and the contents overwritten by subsequent calls to readdir. Could be that. What happens if you copy the data before pushing it on the stack? Mar 8, 2013 at 23:31
  • @LihO in the end it wont just be struct dirent, this is just a simplified example
    – user1850304
    Mar 8, 2013 at 23:34

1 Answer 1

5

The dirent structure returned by readdir() can reuse memory on repeated calls. If you want to save them, you should either copy them into dynamic objects, or allocate the objects first and call readdir_r().

1
  • Perfect! Thanks Barmar it works perfectly after a malloc and memcpy. I see where my error was.
    – user1850304
    Mar 8, 2013 at 23:50

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