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Below, I have simple function with two string pointers parameters. First parameter is expression (i.e. value = "foo") and second parameter is json (i.e. value = {"foo":{"bar":{"baz":true}}}). When I execute the test I get the following:

result:

expression foo{"foo":{"bar":{"baz":true}}}
json {"foo":{"bar":{"baz":true}}} 

expected:

expression foo
json {"foo":{"bar":{"baz":true}}} 

Function code

use std::ffi::{CStr, CString};
use std::os::raw::c_char;
use std::panic::catch_unwind;
use std::str;

#[no_mangle]

pub extern "C" fn execute(expression: *const c_char, json: *const c_char) {
    let result = catch_unwind(|| {
        let expression_cstr = unsafe {
            assert!(!expression.is_null());
            CStr::from_ptr(expression)
        };
        let json_cstr = unsafe {
            assert!(!json.is_null());
            CStr::from_ptr(json)
        };
        let expression_str =
            str::from_utf8(expression_cstr.to_bytes()).map(|e| println!("expression {}", e));
        let json_str = str::from_utf8(json_cstr.to_bytes()).map(|j| println!("json {}", j));
    });
}

#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
    use std::os::raw::c_char;

    #[test]
    fn it_works() {
        let expression = "foo".as_ptr() as *const c_char;
        super::execute(
            expression,
            "{\"foo\":{\"bar\":{\"baz\":true}}}".as_ptr() as *const c_char,
        );
    }
}

1 Answer 1

3

Your execute function expects null-terminated C strings, however Rust strings don't use null-terminated representation, so "foo".as_ptr() as *const c_char doesn't give you a valid C string (and you typically get extra data when you try to treat it as one, although it's technically undefined behavior).

The proper way is to convert to CString before calling your function, to make sure that your inputs have the correct reprensentation:

#[test]
pub fn it_works() {
    let expression = CString::new("foo").unwrap();
    let json = CString::new("{\"foo\":{\"bar\":{\"baz\":true}}}").unwrap();

    super::execute(
        expression.as_ptr(),
        json.as_ptr(),
    );
}
1
  • Another option is to include the null-terminator yourself: "foo\0"
    – kmdreko
    Apr 5, 2021 at 22:49

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