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Mail Archives: djgpp/1997/10/06/07:58:00

Sender: crough45 AT amc DOT de
Message-Id: <97Oct6.134924gmt+0100.11652@internet01.amc.de>
Date: Mon, 6 Oct 1997 12:54:05 +0100
From: Chris Croughton <crough45 AT amc DOT de>
Mime-Version: 1.0
To: demmer AT LSTM DOT Ruhr-UNI-Bochum DOT De
Cc: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
Subject: Re: Flaw in tmpfile() ?

Thomas Demmer wrote:

> I just stumbled across a little flaw in tmpfile(). It opens
> the file according to the current setting of _fmode either
> int text or binary mode. IMHO this should at least be mentioned
> in the docs ;-)

No, it should be corrected.  I raised this as a bug (it's contrary
to the ANSI C specification) as bug number 143 (look in the bug 
tracking system on www.delorie.com, and added a patch.  It was 
accepted that this was a bug and a violation of the ANSI spec., 
but I've seen no sign of an updated library.

I don't know the mechanism for releasing new versions of the 
library - perhaps I'm expected to put my recompiled version on 
the web?

I reproduce the bug report here:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
When Created: 03/24/1997 10:01:23 
In version: 2.01 
By whom: crough45 AT amc DOT de 
Abstract: ANSI function 'tmpfile' opens file in wrong mode 

Function 'tmpfile' in the DJGPP library distribution seems to open
the file in a way contrary to that stated in the ANSI C specification.
In X3.159.1989 it states:

  The tmpfile function creates a temporary binary file that will 
  automatically be removed when it is closed or at program termination.
  ... The file is opened for update with "wb+" mode.

(Para. 7.9.4.3, ellipsis mine.)

Is there a later version of the ANSI/ISO specification which changes
this behaviour?

The source in djlsr201.zip, however, has:

  f = fopen(temp_name, (_fmode & O_TEXT) ? "wt+" : "wb+");

Which (since _fmode defaults to text) opens it by default in text mode.
While this doesn't make any difference on Unix, on MSDOS it has a
drastic
effect - all CRs (0x0D) are deleted and the file is terminated by a ^Z 
(0x1A).

This will (and does) break ANSI-conforming programs which use a
temporary 
file in unpredictable ways - such files are commonly used to store
binary 
data such as pointers and file offsets, which are very likely to contain 
bytes with those values.

I don't have the GCC distribution sources to hand, but it seems possible 
that this has been inherited from the standard GCC library and has just 
never shown up on Unix...

It's easy to test what difference it makes - just open the tmpfile,
write all the characters from 0 to 255 using putc/fputc, rewind and
read them back.  As an example:

#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
        FILE *fp = tmpfile();
        int i, n;
        if (!fp)
        {
                perror("temporary file");
                exit(1);
        }
        for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
                putc(i, fp);
        rewind(fp);
        for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
        {
                n = getc(fp);
                if (i != n)
                        printf("expecting %.2X, got %.2X\n", i, n);
        }
        fclose(fp);
}

It should just exit without messages if it was OK; under DJGPP v2.01 it
produces messages for every character after 0D (CR), and the file is
terminated on reading 1A.

(Incidentally, Borland C v4.02 has the correct behaviour; I haven't
tested it 
with any other DOS compilers.)



Workaround added on 05/17/1997 11:53:18 
By whom: rburtonw AT nyx DOT net 

After opening a tmpfile(), call

setmode(fileno(tmpfilehandle))=O_BINARY;


Note added on 05/22/1997 09:05:47 
By whom: crough45 AT amc DOT de 

That 'workaround' is not portable - UNIX supports
neither O_BINARY nor setmode (it needs neither, of
course).


Solution added on 05/26/1997 10:59:20 
By whom: crough45 AT amc DOT de 

*** src/libc/ansi/stdio/tmpfile.c~      Sun Jun 04 02:47:02 1995
--- src/libc/ansi/stdio/tmpfile.c       Thu May 22 15:24:30 1997
***************
*** 21,27 ****
    if (!n_t_r)
      return 0;
  
!   f = fopen(temp_name, (_fmode & O_TEXT) ? "wt+" : "wb+");
    if (f)
    {
      f->_flag |= _IORMONCL;
--- 21,27 ----
    if (!n_t_r)
      return 0;
  
!   f = fopen(temp_name, "wb+");
    if (f)
    {
      f->_flag |= _IORMONCL;

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