In PHP, I can call base64_encode("\x00". $username. "\x00". $password)
and the "\x00"
represents a NULL character.
Now, in Objective-C, I have a function that converts NSData to base64 encoded NSString created by DaveDribin.
How do I create data from a string that has NULL characters?
This doesn't seem to work...
NSData * authCode = [[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%c%@%c%@", '\0', self.username, '\0', self.password] dataUsingEncoding:NS开发者_开发技巧UTF8StringEncoding];
Like this:
char bytes[] = "\0username\0password";
NSData * data = [NSData dataWithBytes:bytes length:sizeof(bytes)];
NSLog(@"%@", data);
Output:
2010-01-22 09:15:22.546 app[6443] <00757365 726e616d 65007061 7373776f 726400>
Or from NSString
:
char bytes[] = "\0username\0password";
NSString * string = [[NSString alloc] initWithBytes:bytes length:sizeof(bytes) encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
NSData * data = [string dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
You can see the null bytes at the beginning, in between username/password and at the end - because the char[]
is null terminated.
Your syntax is correct. NSString just doesn't handle NULL
bytes well. I can't find any documentation about it, but NSString will silently ignore %c
format specifiers with an argument of 0
(and on that note, the character constant '\0'
expands to the integer 0
; that is correct). It can, however, handle \0
directly embedded into an NSString literal.
See this code:
#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>
int main (int argc, char const *argv[])
{
NSAutoreleasePool *pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];
NSString *stringByChars = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"-%c%c%c%c-",0,0,0,0];
NSString *stringByEscapes = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"-\0\0\0\0-"];
NSLog(@" stringByChars: \"%@\"", stringByChars);
NSLog(@" len: %d", [stringByChars length]);
NSLog(@" data: %@", [stringByChars dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]);
NSLog(@"stringByEscapes: \"%@\"", stringByEscapes);
NSLog(@" len: %d", [stringByEscapes length]);
NSLog(@" data: %@", [stringByEscapes dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]);
[pool drain];
return 0;
}
returns:
stringByChars: "--"
len: 2
data: <2d2d>
stringByEscapes: "-
len: 6
data: <2d000000 002d>
(Note that since the stringByEscapes
actually contains the NULL
bytes, it terminates the NSLog string early).
Not quite sure why this works, but instead of using @"%c" as the format string with '\0', try using @"%@" as the format string with @"\0"
You could also try this (tested and working - taken from: http://www.cocoabuilder.com/archive/cocoa/174917-nul-characters-in-nsstring-cause-unexpected-results.html)
NSString* s1 = [[NSString alloc] initWithBytes:buffer length:sizeof (buffer)
encoding:CFStringConvertEncodingToNSStringEncoding(kCFStringEncodingUTF16LE)]; // @"A[NUL]end" (*)
NSLog(@"s1 = %@", s1);
NSString* s2 = @"CD";
NSLog(@"s2 = %@", s2) ;
NSString* sC = [s1 stringByAppendingString:s2];
NSLog(@"sC = %@", sC);
NSLog(@"length of s1:%i", [s1 length]);
NSLog(@"length of s2:%i", [s2 length]);
NSLog(@"length of sC:%i", [sC length]);
[s1 release];
stefanB's answer looks like a right option. Turns out I was passing in wrong info to make it look like \0 wasn't working
This was ok:
[NSString stringWithFormat:@"\0user\0pass"]
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