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I'm trying to understand when any why a segmentation fault is generated. I wrote a small program which writes to an invalid random address.

I do not see a segmentation fault with this program -

 int main (void)
    {
    int c = 6;

    *(&c + 1000) = 5;

    printf ("0x%llx - %d\n", (unsigned long)&c, c);

    return 0;
    }

which outputs:

$ gcc segmentationFault.c
$ ./a.out
0x7ffc2f709b5c - 6
$

But, I get a seg fault with below code -

int main (void)
{
    int c = 6;

    *(&c + 3000) = 5;

    printf ("0x%llx - %d\n", (unsigned long)&c, c);

    return 0;
}

which produces:

$ gcc segmentationFault.c
$ ./a.out
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
$

Any explanation please?

9
  • 7
    UB and UB. and I do not see a segmentation fault is one of the possible behavior under UB Jun 8, 2018 at 8:03
  • Use a debugger! Jun 8, 2018 at 8:04
  • 3
    The "undefined" in "undefined behaviour" should be a hint, that the result is ... well, undefined. Don't expect anything specific.
    – Gerhardh
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:09
  • Have you tried reading stackoverflow.com/questions/2346806/… ?
    – AS Mackay
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:12
  • 1
    @UnClaimed in a system almost all memory is allocated through the Memory Manager using the paging mechanism. The stack isn't an exception apart for the fact that usually it grows downward.
    – Frankie_C
    Jun 8, 2018 at 9:16

2 Answers 2

3

A segmentation fault happens when your program accesses memory it isn't allowed to access. In your example, c+1000 could still be accessible to your program, while c+3000 isn't any more. However, since it's undefined behavior even *(c+1) could cause a segmentation fault.

4
  • Thanks tstenner,Is there a way I could find the memory space accessible to my program?
    – UnClaimed
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:14
  • I think (&c+1) might be OK because C does not make reading one beyond the end of an array undefined behavior. The dereference will certainly bring trouble, though. Probably a moot point/distinction... Also see Access element beyond the end of an array in C.
    – jww
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:17
  • 1
    @jww Does a variable count as a single element array?
    – Kami Kaze
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:21
  • 3
    @jww But c isn't an array. So definitely UB, right?
    – Spikatrix
    Jun 8, 2018 at 8:30
3

There are different points in your question: one is what C language mandates, one is what your implementation does.

For the C language part: you are invoking Undefined Behaviour because as c is a single variable, &c is a pointer to the beginning of an array of size 1. So dereferencing &c + i is UB for any i != 0. UB means that from a language point of view anything can happen from returning an int to the definitive machine dead. Nothing more can be said here.

For the implementation part, a seg fault is an attempt to read an address that resides is a page that is not bound to the process in a system that gives pages of memory (with possibly virtual addresses, meaning a table mapping addresses in process space to addresses in physical memory). On Linux, the /proc/{pid}/maps and /proc/{pid}/pagemaps give information about the mapping for a process. More details on it on the following SO pages:

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