NAME
stpcpy
, stpncpy
,
strcpy
, strncpy
—
copy strings
LIBRARY
library “libc”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<string.h>
char *
stpcpy
(char
* restrict dst, const
char * restrict src);
char *
stpncpy
(char
* restrict dst, const
char * restrict src,
size_t len);
char *
strcpy
(char
* restrict dst, const
char * restrict src);
char *
strncpy
(char
* restrict dst, const
char * restrict src,
size_t len);
DESCRIPTION
Thestrcpy
()
and
stpcpy
()
functions copy the string src to
dst (including the terminating
‘\0
’ character.)
The
strncpy
()
and
stpncpy
()
functions copy at most len characters from
src into dst.
\0
’ characters.For all of
strcpy
(),
strncpy
(), stpcpy
(), and
stpncpy
(), the result is undefined if
src and dst overlap.
RETURN VALUES
The strcpy
() and
strncpy
() functions return
dst. The stpcpy
() and
stpncpy
() functions return a pointer to the
terminating ‘\0
’ character of
dst. If stpncpy
() does not
terminate dst with a NUL
character, it instead returns a pointer to dst[n]
(which does not necessarily refer to a valid memory location.)
EXAMPLES
The following sets chararray to
“abc\0\0\0
”:
char chararray[6]; (void)strncpy(chararray, "abc", sizeof(chararray));
The following sets chararray to
“abcdef
”:
char chararray[6]; (void)strncpy(chararray, "abcdefgh", sizeof(chararray));
Note that it does not NUL terminate chararray because the length of the source string is greater than or equal to the length argument.
The following copies as many characters from
input to buf as will fit and NUL
terminates the result. Because strncpy
() does
not guarantee to NUL terminate the string itself, this
must be done explicitly.
char buf[1024]; (void)strncpy(buf, input, sizeof(buf) - 1); buf[sizeof(buf) - 1] = '\0';
This could be better achieved using strlcpy(3), as shown in the following example:
(void)strlcpy(buf, input,
sizeof(buf));
SEE ALSO
bcopy(3), memccpy(3), memcpy(3), memmove(3), strlcpy(3), wcscpy(3)
STANDARDS
The strcpy
() and
strncpy
() functions conform to
ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (“ISO C90”).
The stpcpy
() and stpncpy
()
functions conform to IEEE Std 1003.1-2008
(“POSIX.1”).
HISTORY
The stpcpy
() function first appeared in
FreeBSD 4.4, and stpncpy
()
was added in FreeBSD 8.0.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
All of the functions documented in this manual page are easily misused in a manner which enables malicious users to arbitrarily change a running program's functionality through a buffer overflow attack.
It is strongly suggested that the
strlcpy
() function be used in almost all cases.
For some, but not all, fixed-length records, non-terminated
strings may be both valid and desirable. In that specific case, the
strncpy
() function may be most sensible.