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Top Forums Programming basename and dirname changes the value of argument??? Post 302336456 by Sapfeer on Wednesday 22nd of July 2009 07:47:21 AM
Old 07-22-2009
basename and dirname changes the value of argument???

Hi

I faced with some interesting behavior of basename and dirname functions from libgen.h: they changes the value of argument! Here is the declaration:
Code:
char  *basename(char *);
char  *dirname(char *);

It makes some tiresome to use them... I am new to C and maybe I do something wrong, but to make these functions work I have to create some temporary variables... Here is the code:
Code:
...
#include <libgen.h>
...
    char ef[PATH_MAX], eftmp[PATH_MAX], efbn[PATH_MAX] ... ;
...
    strcpy(eftmp, ef);
    strcpy(efbn, basename(eftmp));
...

In this example eftmp before basename() call doesn't equal to eftmp after! For me it looks a little bit strange...

If anyone share some experience on using them in more convenient fashion it will be great! Any comments also appreciated

Thanks in advance
 

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DIRNAME(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							DIRNAME(3)

NAME
dirname, basename - Parse pathname components SYNOPSIS
#include <libgen.h> char *dirname(char *path); char *basename(char *path); DESCRIPTION
The functions dirname and basename break a null-terminated pathname string into directory and filename components. In the usual case, dirname returns the string up to, but not including, the final '/', and basename returns the component following the final '/'. Trailing '/' characters are not counted as part of the pathname. If path does not contain a slash, dirname returns the string "." while basename returns a copy of path. If path is the string "/", then both dirname and basename return the string "/". If path is a NULL pointer or points to an empty string, then both dirname and basename return the string ".". Concatenating the string returned by dirname, a "/", and the string returned by basename yields a complete pathname. Both dirname and basename may modify the contents of path, so if you need to preserve the pathname string, copies should be passed to these functions. Furthermore, dirname and basename may return pointers to statically allocated memory which may be overwritten by subsequent calls. The following list of examples (taken from SUSv2) shows the strings returned by dirname and basename for different paths: path dirname basename "/usr/lib" "/usr" "lib" "/usr/" "/" "usr" "usr" "." "usr" "/" "/" "/" "." "." "." ".." "." ".." EXAMPLE
char *dirc, *basec, *bname, *dname; char *path = "/etc/passwd"; dirc = strdup(path); basec = strdup(path); dname = dirname(dirc); bname = basename(basec); printf("dirname=%s, basename=%s ", dname, bname); free(dirc); free(basec); RETURN VALUE
Both dirname and basename return pointers to null-terminated strings. BUGS
In versions of glibc up to and including 2.2.1, dirname does not correctly handle pathnames with trailing '/' characters, and generates a segmentation violation if given a NULL argument. CONFORMING TO
SUSv2 SEE ALSO
dirname(1), basename(1), GNU
2000-12-14 DIRNAME(3)
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