-1

I have two programs in C:
a client and a server.

I'm not going to develop all the details of the code, things work fine. Except for this point: I want my server to send colored acknowledgment messages and my client to identify them.

On the server the lines look like this:

    //server side there there is:
    FILE * stream; // for the socket

    fprintf(stream,"\x1b[31m220\x1B[0m GET command received please type the file name\n");
    //here stream refers to a classic BSD socket which connect client to server
    //\x1b[31m colors text in red
    //\x1B[0m put back text color to normal

And I wonder what code should I use to detect the acknowledgment on the client:

    //Client side there is:
    FILE * stream; // for the socket (client side)
    char buffer[100]; //to receive the server acknowledgment

    //fgets put the received stream text in the buffer:
    fgets (buffer , sizeof buffer, stream);
    
    //Here strncmp compares the buffer first 11 characters with the string "\x1b[31m220"
    if (strncmp (buffer, "\x1b[31m220",11)== 0)
    {
    printf("\x1B[48;5;%dmCommand received\x1B[0m%s\n",8,buffer);
    }

Things don't work. I wonder what should I put instead of "\x1b[31m220",11 in the client to make things work. I suspect some characters of the color code to be interpreted and therefor to disappear from the string, but which ones?


There is an explanation of the color code here: stdlib and colored output in C

1
  • //Here strncmp compares the buffer first 11 characters that's the problem, \x1b occupies only 1 character, it is an escape code, it should be 8. Jun 28, 2020 at 8:32

2 Answers 2

1

"\x1b[31m220" has 8 characters, not 11. strncmp is going to fail at 9th character which is '\0' in this string and '\x1B' in the buffer.

1

Make your life easier and let compiler calculate the sizes for you:

#define COLOURCODE "\x1b[31m220"

if (strncmp (buffer, COLOURCODE, sizeof(COLOURCODE) - 1)== 0)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.