> And let there be light... DANG.. well it almost blinded me. I was > confusing with char[16], which has the +1 byte for the null > terminating, but the malloc(16) hasn't...
No, that's still not quite it... char[16] allocates exactly 16 characters. Period. There's no extra space on the end for the terminating nul. If you try to put a sixteen character string into this array, the terminating nul will slop over onto whatever follows this array in memory. malloc(16) is essentially the same. The difference is that there might not be something right there to be clobbered. malloc tends to round up the number of bytes to something convenient. It's easier to manage a pool of things that are all the same size than a zillion different sizes. 16 is pretty small -- the linux malloc might round everything smaller than 20 bytes or 24 bytes (why 20 or 24? That's another story...) to 20 or 24 bytes bytes just to make its life easier. Therefore it's giving you four "extra" bytes and the nul can clobber them without causing you to notice the bug. -Dan _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"