336

What is the purpose of the strdup() function in C?

6
  • 46
    there is also strdupa() (in the GNU C library), a nice function that is similar to strdup(), but allocates memory on the stack. Your program don't need to free the memory explicitly as in case with strdup(), it will be freed automatically when you exit the function where strdupa() was called
    – dmityugov
    Oct 31, 2008 at 13:05
  • 12
    strdupa is dangerous and should not be used unless you've already determined that strlen is very small. But then you could just use a fixed-size array on the stack. Dec 29, 2010 at 16:34
  • 4
    @slacker google translate isn't being helpful... What does strdup/strdupa mean in Polish? Mar 7, 2015 at 16:47
  • 17
    @haneefmubarak here
    – anatolyg
    Sep 30, 2015 at 17:02
  • 1
    Just came here to add that both "dupa" and "string" have something to do with ass in Polish.
    – Big Temp
    May 11, 2020 at 20:02

11 Answers 11

408

Exactly what it sounds like, assuming you're used to the abbreviated way in which C and UNIX assigns words, it duplicates strings :-)

Keeping in mind it's actually not part of the current (C17) ISO C standard itself(a) (it's a POSIX thing), it's effectively doing the same as the following code:

char *strdup(const char *src) {
    char *dst = malloc(strlen (src) + 1);  // Space for length plus nul
    if (dst == NULL) return NULL;          // No memory
    strcpy(dst, src);                      // Copy the characters
    return dst;                            // Return the new string
}

In other words:

  1. It tries to allocate enough memory to hold the old string (plus a '\0' character to mark the end of the string).

  2. If the allocation failed, it sets errno to ENOMEM and returns NULL immediately. Setting of errno to ENOMEM is something malloc does in POSIX so we don't need to explicitly do it in our strdup. If you're not POSIX compliant, ISO C doesn't actually mandate the existence of ENOMEM so I haven't included that here(b).

  3. Otherwise the allocation worked so we copy the old string to the new string(c) and return the new address (which the caller is responsible for freeing at some point).

Keep in mind that's the conceptual definition. Any library writer worth their salary may have provided heavily optimised code targeting the particular processor being used.

One other thing to keep in mind, it looks like this is currently slated to be in the C2x iteration of the standard, along with strndup, as per draft N2912 of the document.


(a) However, functions starting with str and a lower case letter are reserved by the standard for future directions. From C11 7.1.3 Reserved identifiers:

Each header declares or defines all identifiers listed in its associated sub-clause, and optionally declares or defines identifiers listed in its associated future library directions sub-clause.*

The future directions for string.h can be found in C11 7.31.13 String handling <string.h>:

Function names that begin with str, mem, or wcs and a lowercase letter may be added to the declarations in the <string.h> header.

So you should probably call it something else if you want to be safe.


(b) The change would basically be replacing if (d == NULL) return NULL; with:

if (d == NULL) {
    errno = ENOMEM;
    return NULL;
}

(c) Note that I use strcpy for that since that clearly shows the intent. In some implementations, it may be faster (since you already know the length) to use memcpy, as they may allow for transferring the data in larger chunks, or in parallel. Or it may not :-) Optimisation mantra #1: "measure, don't guess".

In any case, should you decide to go that route, you would do something like:

char *strdup(const char *src) {
    size_t len = strlen(src) + 1;       // String plus '\0'
    char *dst = malloc(len);            // Allocate space
    if (dst == NULL) return NULL;       // No memory
    memcpy (dst, src, len);             // Copy the block
    return dst;                         // Return the new string
}
17
  • 8
    It is worth noting, that as Pax' sample implementation implies, strdup(NULL) is undefined and not something you can expect to behave in any predicable way.
    – unwind
    May 22, 2009 at 10:14
  • 2
    Also, I think malloc() would set errno, so you shouldn't have to set it yourself. I think.
    – Chris Lutz
    Jun 8, 2009 at 3:58
  • 5
    @Alcot, strdup is for those situations where you want heap memory allocated for the string copy. Otherwise you have to do it yourself. If you already have a big enough buffer (malloc'ed or otherwise), yes, use strcpy.
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 28, 2012 at 1:15
  • 2
    @acgtyrant: if, by standard, you mean the ISO standard (the real C standard), no, it's not part of it. It is part of the POSIX standard. However, there are plenty of C implementations that provide it, despite not being an official part of ISO C. However, even if they didn't, the five-liner in this answer should be more than sufficient.
    – paxdiablo
    Apr 16, 2014 at 10:37
  • 2
    Good point, @chux, ISO mandates only { EDOM, EILSEQ, ERANGE } as required error codes. Have updated the answer to account for this.
    – paxdiablo
    Jan 30, 2018 at 6:13
90
char * strdup(const char * s)
{
  size_t len = 1+strlen(s);
  char *p = malloc(len);

  return p ? memcpy(p, s, len) : (errno = ENOMEM, NULL);
}

Maybe the code is a bit faster than with strcpy() as the \0 char doesn't need to be searched again (It already was with strlen()).

EDIT: according to some documents, strdup() sets errno to ENOMEM when allocation fails.

4
  • Thanks. In my personal implementation I make it even "worse". return memcpy(malloc(len), s, len); as I prefer the crash on allocation rather than the NULL on allocation failure. Dec 30, 2010 at 21:00
  • 6
    @tristopia dereferencing NULL doesn't have to crash; it's undefined. If you want to be sure it crashes, write an emalloc which calls abort upon fail.
    – Dave
    Dec 30, 2011 at 3:28
  • I know that, but my implementation is guaranteed to run only on Solaris or Linux (by the very nature of the app). Dec 30, 2011 at 13:01
  • 1
    @tristopia: It's good to be in the habit of doing things the best way. Get in the habit of using emalloc even if it's not necessary on Solaris or Linux so that you'll be using it in the future when you write code on other platforms. Feb 28, 2015 at 20:20
53

No point repeating the other answers, but please note that strdup() can do anything it wants from a C perspective, since it is not part of any C standard. It is however defined by POSIX.1-2001.

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  • 7
    Is strdup() portable? No, not available in non-POSIX environment (trivially implementable anyway). But to say a POSIX function can do anything is quite pedantic. POSIX is another standard that's as good as C's and even more popular.
    – P.P
    May 9, 2014 at 8:58
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    @BlueMoon I think the point is that a C implementation that claims no conformance to POSIX may still provide a strdup function as an extension. On such an implementation, there's no guarantee that that strdup behaves the same way as the POSIX function. I don't know of any such implementations, but a legitimate non-malicious implementation might provide char *strdup(char *) for historic reasons, and reject attempts to pass in a const char *.
    – user743382
    Mar 6, 2015 at 22:19
  • What is the difference between C standard and POSIX ? By C standard you mean, it does not exist in C standard libraries? Mar 22, 2015 at 11:35
  • @KorayTugay They are different standards. Better to treat them as unrelated unless you know that the standard for a particular C function conforms to the POSIX standard, and that your compiler/library conforms to the standard for that function. Mar 23, 2015 at 19:40
18

From strdup man:

The strdup() function shall return a pointer to a new string, which is a duplicate of the string pointed to by s1. The returned pointer can be passed to free(). A null pointer is returned if the new string cannot be created.

5

strdup() does dynamic memory allocation for the character array including the end character '\0' and returns the address of the heap memory:

char *strdup (const char *s)
{
    char *p = malloc (strlen (s) + 1);   // allocate memory
    if (p != NULL)
        strcpy (p,s);                    // copy string
    return p;                            // return the memory
}

So, what it does is give us another string identical to the string given by its argument, without requiring us to allocate memory. But we still need to free it, later.

5

strdup and strndup are defined in POSIX compliant systems as:

char *strdup(const char *str);
char *strndup(const char *str, size_t len);

The strdup() function allocates sufficient memory for a copy of the string str, does the copy, and returns a pointer to it.

The pointer may subsequently be used as an argument to the function free.

If insufficient memory is available, NULL is returned and errno is set to ENOMEM.

The strndup() function copies at most len characters from the string str always null terminating the copied string.

3

It makes a duplicate copy of the string passed in by running a malloc and strcpy of the string passed in. The malloc'ed buffer is returned to the caller, hence the need to run free on the return value.

2

The statement:

strcpy(ptr2, ptr1);

is equivalent to (other than the fact this changes the pointers):

while(*ptr2++ = *ptr1++);

Whereas:

ptr2 = strdup(ptr1);

is equivalent to:

ptr2 = malloc(strlen(ptr1) + 1);
if (ptr2 != NULL) strcpy(ptr2, ptr1);

So, if you want the string which you have copied to be used in another function (as it is created in heap section), you can use strdup, else strcpy is enough,

1

The most valuable thing it does is give you another string identical to the first, without requiring you to allocate memory (location and size) yourself. But, as noted, you still need to free it (but which doesn't require a quantity calculation, either.)

0

The strdup() function is a shorthand for string duplicate, it takes in a parameter as a string constant or a string literal and allocates just enough space for the string and writes the corresponding characters in the space allocated and finally returns the address of the allocated space to the calling routine.

1
  • 2
    The argument to strdup does not need to be a string constant, it must be a C string, ie a null terminated array of char.
    – chqrlie
    Aug 18, 2018 at 11:03
0

Using strdup you can get a modifiable copy of the string word or any string. In this way, you can change its contents without encountering the problems of replacing the hard memory.

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

int main() {
    const char* original = "Hello, World!";
    char *copy = strdup(original); // Create a copy

    if (copy != NULL) {
        // Modify the copy
        strcpy(copy, " Again Hello World \n");

        printf("Original: %s\n", original); 
        printf("Copy: %s\n", copy);         

        free(copy); 
    } else {
        printf("Memory allocation failed.\n");
    }

    return 0;
}

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