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Top Forums Programming readdir and dynamic array memory corruption Post 302491516 by torbium on Thursday 27th of January 2011 04:34:26 PM
Old 01-27-2011
readdir and dynamic array memory corruption

Hi everyone

I am developing an utility.
At some part of it I read directory entries to a dynamic array: struct list
It stores pointers to items: list.entries,
which are structures: struct entry

If a number of files in a directory is greater then number of elements an array was initially allocated,
I reallocate memory for this array.
if (c > list_size)

And at this point something strange happens.
Pointers are correct.
While I can successfully allocate memory for new items
list.entries[c] = malloc(sizeof(struct entry));
list.entries[0]->pde->d_name is corrupted at some iteration, but always if list.entries was reallocated.

See the test code provided.

If I do not realloc list.entries everything goes fine.
I played with list_size values.
On Mac OS X (10.4.0 Darwin Kernel Version 10.4.0) memory is corrupted while list.entries[124] is processed.
On Ubuntu Linux 2.6.24-23-xen #1 SMP Wed Apr 1 23:47:10 UTC 2009 x86_64 GNU/Linux while list.entries[196] is processed.
If I don't use readdir and explicitly allocate
list.entries[c]->pde = malloc(sizeof(struct dirent));
memory is not corrupted.

What is wrong?
Where is the problem?
What is the best way to read dir entries to a dynamic array?

Code:
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <pwd.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <unistd.h>

int
main (void)
{
    int i, c, ac;
    unsigned int list_size = 10;
    char * fname;
    
    DIR *pdir;
    struct dirent *pde;
    
    
    struct entry {
        struct stat st;
        struct dirent *pde;
    };
    
    struct list {
        int count;
        struct entry **entries;
    } list;
    
    struct entry **ppent;
    pdir = NULL;
    pde = NULL;
    
    pdir = opendir("/usr/bin");
    
    if ((list.entries = malloc(list_size * sizeof(struct entry *))) == NULL)
        return 1;
    
    c = 0;
    ac = 0; /* allocation counter */
    while ((pde = readdir(pdir)) != NULL) {
        if (c > list_size - 1) {
            list_size <<= 1;
            if ((list.entries = realloc(list.entries,
                                    list_size * sizeof(struct entry*))) == NULL) {
                perror("unable to realloc");
                return 1;
            }
            ac++;
        }

        list.entries[c] = malloc(sizeof(struct entry));
        list.entries[c]->pde = pde;

        if (strcmp(list.entries[0]->pde->d_name, ".") != 0) {
            printf("memory corruption. size of array %d items\n", c);
            printf("number of reallocations %d\n", ac);
            return 1;
        }
        
        printf("base address: %p pointer address: %p entry pointer value: %p name: %s\n",
               list.entries, &list.entries[c], list.entries[c], list.entries[c]->pde->d_name);
        c++;
    }
    
    return 0;
}

 

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scandir(3UCB)					     SunOS/BSD Compatibility Library Functions					     scandir(3UCB)

NAME
scandir, alphasort - scan a directory SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/cc [ flag... ] file... #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/dir.h> int scandir(dirname, namelist, select, dcomp); char *dirname; struct direct *(*namelist[]); int (*select(.),(*dcomp)(); int alphasort(d1, d2); struct direct **d1, **d2; DESCRIPTION
The scandir() function reads the directory dirname and builds an array of pointers to directory entries using malloc(3C). The second param- eter is a pointer to an array of structure pointers. The third parameter is a pointer to a routine which is called with a pointer to a directory entry and should return a non zero value if the directory entry should be included in the array. If this pointer is NULL, then all the directory entries will be included. The last argument is a pointer to a routine which is passed to qsort(3C), which sorts the com- pleted array. If this pointer is NULL, the array is not sorted. The alphasort() function sorts the array alphabetically. RETURN VALUES
The scandir() function returns the number of entries in the array and a pointer to the array through the parameter namelist. The scandir() function returns -1 if the directory cannot be opened for reading or if malloc(3C) cannot allocate enough memory to hold all the data structures. The alphasort() function returns an integer greater than, equal to, or less than 0 if the directory entry name pointed to by d1 is greater than, equal to, or less than the directory entry name pointed to by d2. USAGE
The scandir() and alphasort() functions have transitional interfaces for 64-bit file offsets. See lf64(5). SEE ALSO
getdents(2), malloc(3C), qsort(3C), readdir(3UCB), readdir(3C), lf64(5) NOTES
Use of these functions should be restricted to applications written on BSD platforms. Use of these functions with any of the system libraries or in multithreaded applications is unsupported. SunOS 5.10 3 Jan 2002 scandir(3UCB)
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