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Top Forums Programming Executing command line options Post 23970 by sharuvman on Wednesday 3rd of July 2002 07:50:57 AM
Old 07-03-2002
try this one

Can you try this one ??
#include "stdio.h"
#include "stdlib.h"
#include "string.h"

void main(int argc, char **argv)
{
char str[30];
if (argv[2][0] == '-')
{
strcpy(str,argv[1]);
strcat(str," ");
strcat(str,argv[2]);
system (str);
}

}//end of main

or

void main(int argc, char **argv)
{
system(argv[1]);
}

for second case, you need to give input as say "ls -l" within double quotes.
You can have any combination for this.
Like let us assume "a.out" is the binary then

./a.out "who | wc -l" also works for the second option.,....


bye,
sharath
 

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SSP(3)							   BSD Library Functions Manual 						    SSP(3)

NAME
ssp -- bounds checked libc functions LIBRARY
Buffer Overflow Protection Library (libssp, -lssp) SYNOPSIS
#include <ssp/stdio.h> int sprintf(char *str, const char *fmt, ...); int vsprintf(char *str, const char *fmt, va_list ap); int snprintf(char *str, size_t len, const char *fmt, ...); int vsnprintf(char *str, size_t len, const char *fmt, va_list ap); char * gets(char *str); char * fgets(char *str, int len, FILE *fp); #include <ssp/string.h> void * memcpy(void *str, const void *ptr, size_t len); void * memmove(void *str, const void *ptr, size_t len); void * memset(void *str, int val, size_t len); char * strcpy(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len); char * strcat(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len); char * strncpy(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len); char * strncat(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len); #include <ssp/strings.h> void * bcopy(const void *ptr, void *str, size_t len); void * bzero(void *str, size_t len); #include <ssp/unistd.h> ssize_t read(int fd, void *str, size_t len); int readlink(const char * restrict path, char * restrict str, size_t len); int getcwd(char *str, size_t len); DESCRIPTION
When _FORTIFY_SOURCE bounds checking is enabled as described below, the above functions get overwritten to use the __builtin_object_size(3) function to compute the size of str, if known at compile time, and perform bounds check on it in order to avoid data buffer or stack buffer overflows. If an overflow is detected, the routines will call abort(3). To enable these function overrides the following should be added to the gcc(1) command line: ``-I/usr/include/ssp'' to override the standard include files and ``-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1'' or ``-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2''. If _FORTIFY_SOURCE is set to 1 the code will compute the maximum possible buffer size for str, and if set to 2 it will compute the minimum buffer size. SEE ALSO
gcc(1), __builtin_object_size(3), stdio(3), string(3), security(7) HISTORY
The ssp library appeared NetBSD 4.0. BSD
March 21, 2011 BSD
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