Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: deamonizing
Top Forums Programming deamonizing Post 302072241 by blowtorch on Sunday 30th of April 2006 01:14:43 AM
Old 04-30-2006
To answer your questions:
1. How to daemonize your program: this is a very nice explaination of how do that.

2. Regarding the warning: You are getting that cause the program is trying to assign an address (probably an int, definitely numerical) value to a char type of variable. You can write the code as
Code:
char **p=(char**)&p;

and prevent the warning from being thrown.

3. Regarding the output: You are printing an address, which is some random number, as a string. What output are you expecting? Try printing that as an integer.
 
curl_easy_unescape(3)						  libcurl Manual					     curl_easy_unescape(3)

NAME
curl_easy_unescape - URL decodes the given string SYNOPSIS
#include <curl/curl.h> char *curl_easy_unescape( CURL *curl, const char *url , int inlength, int *outlength ); DESCRIPTION
This function converts the given URL encoded input string to a "plain string" and returns that in an allocated memory area. All input char- acters that are URL encoded (%XX where XX is a two-digit hexadecimal number) are converted to their binary versions. If the length argument is set to 0 (zero), curl_easy_unescape(3) will use strlen() on the input url string to find out the size. If outlength is non-NULL, the function will write the length of the returned string in the integer it points to. This allows an escaped string containing %00 to still get used properly after unescaping. Since this is a pointer to an int type, it can only return a value up to INT_MAX so no longer string can be unescaped if the string length is returned in this parameter. You must curl_free(3) the returned string when you're done with it. AVAILABILITY
Added in 7.15.4 and replaces the old curl_unescape(3) function. RETURN VALUE
A pointer to a zero terminated string or NULL if it failed. SEE ALSO
curl_easy_escape(3), curl_free(3),RFC3986 libcurl 7.54.0 October 04, 2016 curl_easy_unescape(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:22 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy