28
#include<stdio.h>

int main()
{
    char *name = "Vikram";
    printf("%s",name);
    name[1]='s';
    printf("%s",name);
    return 0;
}

There is no output printed on terminal and just get segmentation fault. But when I run it in GDB, I get following -

Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x0000000000400525 in main () at seg2.c:7
7       name[1]='s';
(gdb) 

This means program receive SEG fault on 7th line (obviously I can't write on constant char array) . Then why printf() of line number 6 is not executed ?

1
  • I'm not quite sure. It works as expected on my mac running OSX Lion (complied with LLVM, debugged with LLDB). Feb 27, 2012 at 18:02

4 Answers 4

56

This is due to stream buffering of stdout. Unless you do fflush(stdout) or you print a newline "\n" the output is may be buffered.

In this case, it's segfaulting before the buffer is flushed and printed.

You can try this instead:

printf("%s",name);
fflush(stdout);        //  Flush the stream.
name[1]='s';           //  Segfault here (undefined behavior)

or:

printf("%s\n",name);   //  Flush the stream with '\n'
name[1]='s';           //  Segfault here (undefined behavior)
3
  • 17
    Note that fflush is really the right way to do it - a newline is not guaranteed to trigger a flush (and I've been bitten by that behavior before). Feb 27, 2012 at 18:30
  • BTW, puts(name) is equivalent to printf("%s\n",name);, although some people dislike the implicit newline. Compilers will optimize the printf into puts for you. Dec 31, 2021 at 7:48
  • Including a newline only flushes implicitly without fflush for line-buffered stdout, not full buffered; if you redirect stdout to a file, it will be full-buffered. stderr is always unbuffered; that's one reason to favour fprintf(stderr, ...) for debug-prints around segfaults, if you don't want to include a newline, or might want to redirect the log to a file, and don't want to also use fflush after every call. Dec 31, 2021 at 7:53
11

First you should end your printfs with "\n" (or at least the last one). But that is not related to the segfault.

When the compiler compiles your code, it splits the binary into several section. Some are read only, while other are writeable. Writing to an read only section may cause a segfault. String literals are usually placed in a read only section (gcc should put it in ".rodata"). The pointer name points to that ro section. Therefore you must use

const char *name = "Vikram";

In my response I've used a few "may" "should". The behaviour depends on your OS, compiler and compilation settings (The linker script defines the sections).

Adding

-Wa,-ahlms=myfile.lst

to gcc's command line produces a file called myfile.lst with the generated assembler code. At the top you can see

    .section .rodata
.LC0:
    .string "Vikram"

Which shows that the string is in Vikram.

The same code using (Must be in global scope, else gcc may store it on the stack, notice it is an array and not a pointer)

char name[] = "Vikram";

produces

    .data
    .type name, @object
    .size name, 7
name:
    .string "Vikram"

The syntax is a bit different but see how it is in .data section now, which is read-write. By the way this example works.

2
  • 2
    If you notice, the OP is not asking why the segfault occurs, but why the string wasn't printed out in the first place. Feb 27, 2012 at 18:39
  • 2
    although this may not be exactly answer to the question, the tip and explain on .rodata and .data is helpful.
    – vts
    May 8, 2014 at 16:16
5

The reason you are getting a segmentation fault is that C string literals are read only according to the C standard, and you are attempting to write 's' over the second element of the literal array "Vikram".

The reason you are getting no output is because your program is buffering its output and crashes before it has a chance to flush its buffer. The purpose of the stdio library, in addition to providing friendly formatting functions like printf(3), is to reduce the overhead of i/o operations by buffering data in in-memory buffers and only flushing output when necessary, and only performing input occasionally instead of constantly. Actual input and output will not, in the general case, occur at the moment when you call the stdio function, but only when the output buffer is full (or the input buffer is empty).

Things are slightly different if a FILE object has been set so it flushes constantly (like stderr), but in general, that's the gist.

If you're debugging, it is best to fprintf to stderr to assure that your debug printouts will get flushed before a crash.

1

By default when stdout is connected to a terminal, the stream is line-buffered. In practice, in your example the absence of '\n' (or of an explicit stream flush) is why you don't get the characters printed.

But in theory undefined behavior is not bounded (from the Standard "behavior [...] for which this International Standard imposes no requirements") and the segfault can happen even before the undefined behavior occurs, for example before the first printf call!

2
  • So... you are saying that the behaviour is so undefined that it can act backwards in time? Mar 29, 2017 at 19:17
  • @JohnLawrenceAspden Probably not in this case but in other programs the compiler might move an assignment to the top of the function or even execute code in parallel. Itanium machine code could do six things in one instruction bundle. Figuring out which one caused a processor trap was interesting.
    – Zan Lynx
    Sep 19, 2018 at 23:31

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