I need some help with char*
initialization and strstr
in C. This is the general issue:
I have a function func1
func1() func2();
The issue is that valgrind gives an error basically saying that strstr might be using an uninitialized value. To rectify this, I'd have to do something like char* str = "hello world";
, but then I can't realloc
, which is an issue.
I have tested my program with random strings and the issue开发者_开发技巧 is the fact that valgrind is treating str
as uninitialized, but I just don't know how to initialize it without getting rid of the ability to realloc. Any suggestions?
The error is:
==14356== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==14356== at 0x4C29313: strstr (in path)
==14356== by 0x401983: func2 (in path)
==14356== by 0x401B06: func1 (in path)
==14356== by 0x4013D7: main (in path)
==14356==
==14358== Syscall param execve(argv[i]) points to uninitialised byte(s)
at 0x4ECFCB7: execve (in path)
==14308== by 0x4E6A76C: do_system (in path)
==14308== by 0x4013ED: main
Edited: Added in the actual functions, changed names and such.
In your func1
you have the following:
str = realloc(str, (stringLen + currExpLen) * sizeof(char)+2);
sprintf(str, "%s %s", str, currExp);
Using the same string on both sides of sprintf
is probably a bad idea. As the output is written its going to clobber the input (str
) which could result in any manner of unexpected behaviors. realloc
takes care of whatever copying might be needed, so your sprintf could be replaced by some strcats:
str = realloc(str, (stringLen + currExpLen) * sizeof(char)+2);
strcat(str, " ");
strcat(str, currExp);
I believe this is your problem:
In func2:
str = realloc(str, (stringLen + pathLen+1)*sizeof(char));
memmove(&str[rplcIndx + pathLen], &str[rplcIndx+2], stringLen-rplcIndx-2);
memcpy(&str[rplcIndx], path, pathLen);
The memmove
doesn't copy the null terminator (it is at position stringLen
, but the last byte copied would be rpcIndx+2+stringLen-rpcIndx-2-1 = stringLen-1
(remember src[len]
is the first byte NOT copied). This means
- the position of the null terminator is not initialized
- the string is possibly not correctly terminated
BTW, if you can, using asprintf
is safe, easy and fool-proof way of doing many string-manipulation tasks, although it may be a little less effective.
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