On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 08:17:14AM +0800, peter garrone wrote: >I was having a problem with mkcramfs on cygwin creating symbolic links >for the compressed linux filesystem. > >mkcramfs uses malloc to allocate a buffer that it sends to the readlink function in >cygwin path.cc >That function uses memcpy to do a copy of the link into a buffer. >Neither mkcramfs or readlink is null-terminating the string representing the link. > >Probably both are at fault. I have fixed my problem by zeroing the buffer in mkcramfs > before calling readlink, but it would probably be beneficial if readlink terminates > the returned string, if there is room.
NAME readlink - read value of a symbolic link SYNOPSIS #include <unistd.h> int readlink(const char *path, char *buf, size_t bufsiz); DESCRIPTION readlink places the contents of the symbolic link path in the buffer buf, which has size bufsiz. readlink does not append a NUL character to buf. It will truncate the contents (to a length of bufsiz charac- ters), in case the buffer is too small to hold all of the contents. -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/