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1 .\" Copyright (C) 1993 David Metcalfe (david@prism.demon.co.uk)
2 .\"
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24 .\"
25 .\" References consulted:
26 .\" Linux libc source code
27 .\" Lewine's _POSIX Programmer's Guide_ (O'Reilly & Associates, 1991)
28 .\" 386BSD man pages
29 .\" Modified Sat Jul 24 18:06:49 1993 by Rik Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu)
30 .\" Modified Fri Aug 25 23:17:51 1995 by Andries Brouwer (aeb@cwi.nl)
31 .\" Modified Wed Dec 18 00:47:18 1996 by Andries Brouwer (aeb@cwi.nl)
32 .\" 2007-06-15, Marc Boyer <marc.boyer@enseeiht.fr> + mtk
33 .\" Improve discussion of strncpy().
34 .\"
35 .TH STRCPY 3 2015-08-08 "GNU" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
36 .SH NAME
37 strcpy, strncpy \- copy a string
38 .SH SYNOPSIS
39 .nf
40 .B #include <string.h>
41 .PP
42 .BI "char *strcpy(char *" dest ", const char *" src );
43 .PP
44 .BI "char *strncpy(char *" dest ", const char *" src ", size_t " n );
45 .fi
46 .SH DESCRIPTION
47 The
48 .BR strcpy ()
49 function copies the string pointed to by
50 .IR src ,
51 including the terminating null byte (\(aq\\0\(aq),
52 to the buffer pointed to by
53 .IR dest .
54 The strings may not overlap, and the destination string
55 .I dest
56 must be large enough to receive the copy.
57 .IR "Beware of buffer overruns!"
58 (See BUGS.)
59 .PP
60 The
61 .BR strncpy ()
62 function is similar, except that at most
63 .I n
64 bytes of
65 .I src
66 are copied.
67 .BR Warning :
68 If there is no null byte
69 among the first
70 .I n
71 bytes of
72 .IR src ,
73 the string placed in
74 .I dest
75 will not be null-terminated.
76 .PP
77 If the length of
78 .I src
79 is less than
80 .IR n ,
81 .BR strncpy ()
82 writes additional null bytes to
83 .I dest
84 to ensure that a total of
85 .I n
86 bytes are written.
87 .PP
88 A simple implementation of
89 .BR strncpy ()
90 might be:
91 .in +4n
92 .nf
93
94 char *
95 strncpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t n)
96 {
97 size_t i;
98
99 for (i = 0; i < n && src[i] != \(aq\\0\(aq; i++)
100 dest[i] = src[i];
101 for ( ; i < n; i++)
102 dest[i] = \(aq\\0\(aq;
103
104 return dest;
105 }
106 .fi
107 .in
108 .SH RETURN VALUE
109 The
110 .BR strcpy ()
111 and
112 .BR strncpy ()
113 functions return a pointer to
114 the destination string
115 .IR dest .
116 .SH ATTRIBUTES
117 For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
118 .BR attributes (7).
119 .TS
120 allbox;
121 lbw19 lb lb
122 l l l.
123 Interface Attribute Value
124 T{
125 .BR strcpy (),
126 .BR strncpy ()
127 T} Thread safety MT-Safe
128 .TE
129 .SH CONFORMING TO
130 POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, C89, C99, SVr4, 4.3BSD.
131 .SH NOTES
132 Some programmers consider
133 .BR strncpy ()
134 to be inefficient and error prone.
135 If the programmer knows (i.e., includes code to test!)
136 that the size of
137 .I dest
138 is greater than
139 the length of
140 .IR src ,
141 then
142 .BR strcpy ()
143 can be used.
144
145 One valid (and intended) use of
146 .BR strncpy ()
147 is to copy a C string to a fixed-length buffer
148 while ensuring both that the buffer is not overflowed
149 and that unused bytes in the target buffer are zeroed out
150 (perhaps to prevent information leaks if the buffer is to be
151 written to media or transmitted to another process via an
152 interprocess communication technique).
153
154 If there is no terminating null byte in the first
155 .I n
156 bytes of
157 .IR src ,
158 .BR strncpy ()
159 produces an unterminated string in
160 .IR dest .
161 If
162 .I buf
163 has length
164 .IR buflen ,
165 you can force termination using something like the following:
166 .in +4n
167 .nf
168
169 strncpy(buf, str, buflen \- 1);
170 if (buflen > 0)
171 buf[buflen \- 1]= \(aq\\0\(aq;
172 .fi
173 .in
174 .PP
175 (Of course, the above technique ignores the fact that, if
176 .I src
177 contains more than
178 .I "buflen\ \-\ 1"
179 bytes, information is lost in the copying to
180 .IR dest .)
181 .\"
182 .SS strlcpy()
183 Some systems (the BSDs, Solaris, and others) provide the following function:
184
185 size_t strlcpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t size);
186
187 .\" http://static.usenix.org/event/usenix99/full_papers/millert/millert_html/index.html
188 .\" "strlcpy and strlcat - consistent, safe, string copy and concatenation"
189 .\" 1999 USENIX Annual Technical Conference
190 This function is similar to
191 .BR strncpy (),
192 but it copies at most
193 .I size\-1
194 bytes to
195 .IR dest ,
196 always adds a terminating null byte,
197 and does not pad the target with (further) null bytes.
198 This function fixes some of the problems of
199 .BR strcpy ()
200 and
201 .BR strncpy (),
202 but the caller must still handle the possibility of data loss if
203 .I size
204 is too small.
205 The return value of the function is the length of
206 .IR src ,
207 which allows truncation to be easily detected:
208 if the return value is greater than or equal to
209 .IR size ,
210 truncation occurred.
211 If loss of data matters, the caller
212 .I must
213 either check the arguments before the call,
214 or test the function return value.
215 .BR strlcpy ()
216 is not present in glibc and is not standardized by POSIX,
217 .\" https://lwn.net/Articles/506530/
218 but is available on Linux via the
219 .IR libbsd
220 library.
221 .SH BUGS
222 If the destination string of a
223 .BR strcpy ()
224 is not large enough, then anything might happen.
225 Overflowing fixed-length string buffers is a favorite cracker technique
226 for taking complete control of the machine.
227 Any time a program reads or copies data into a buffer,
228 the program first needs to check that there's enough space.
229 This may be unnecessary if you can show that overflow is impossible,
230 but be careful: programs can get changed over time,
231 in ways that may make the impossible possible.
232 .SH SEE ALSO
233 .BR bcopy (3),
234 .BR memccpy (3),
235 .BR memcpy (3),
236 .BR memmove (3),
237 .BR stpcpy (3),
238 .BR stpncpy (3),
239 .BR strdup (3),
240 .BR string (3),
241 .BR wcscpy (3),
242 .BR wcsncpy (3)