strncpy man page on Minix

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STRCPY(3)		 BSD Library Functions Manual		     STRCPY(3)

NAME
     stpcpy, stpncpy, strcpy, strncpy — copy strings

LIBRARY
     Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
     #include <string.h>

     char *
     stpcpy(char * restrict dst, const char * restrict src);

     char *
     stpncpy(char * restrict dst, const char * restrict src, size_t len);

     char *
     strcpy(char * restrict dst, const char * restrict src);

     char *
     strncpy(char * restrict dst, const char * restrict src, size_t len);

DESCRIPTION
     The stpcpy() and strcpy() functions copy the string src to dst (including
     the terminating ‘\0’ character).

     The stpncpy() and strncpy() functions copy at most len characters from
     src into dst.  If src is less than len characters long, the remainder of
     dst is filled with ‘\0’ characters.  Otherwise, dst is not terminated.

RETURN VALUES
     The strcpy() and strncpy() functions return dst.  The stpcpy() and
     stpncpy() functions return a pointer to the terminating ‘\0’ character of
     dst.  If stpncpy() does not terminate dst with a NUL character, it
     instead returns a pointer to dst[len] (which does not necessarily refer
     to a valid memory location.)

EXAMPLES
     The following sets chararray to “abc\0\0\0”:

	   char chararray[6];

	   (void)strncpy(chararray, "abc", sizeof(chararray));

     The following sets chararray to “abcdef”:

	   char chararray[6];

	   (void)strncpy(chararray, "abcdefgh", sizeof(chararray));

     Note that it does not NUL-terminate chararray because the length of the
     source string is greater than or equal to the length parameter.
     strncpy() only NUL-terminates the destination string when the length of
     the source string is less than the length parameter.

     The following copies as many characters from input to buf as will fit and
     NUL-terminates the result.	 Because strncpy() does not guarantee to
     NUL-terminate the string itself, this must be done explicitly.

	   char buf[1024];

	   (void)strncpy(buf, input, sizeof(buf) - 1);
	   buf[sizeof(buf) - 1] = '\0';

     This could be better and more simply achieved using strlcpy(3), as shown
     in the following example:

	   (void)strlcpy(buf, input, sizeof(buf));

     Note that because strlcpy(3) is not defined in any standards, it should
     only be used when portability is not a concern.

SEE ALSO
     bcopy(3), memccpy(3), memcpy(3), memmove(3), strlcpy(3), wcscpy(3)

STANDARDS
     The strcpy() and strncpy() functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999
     (“ISO C99”).  The stpcpy() and stpncpy() functions conform to IEEE Std
     1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”).

HISTORY
     The stpcpy() and stpncpy() functions first appeared in NetBSD 6.0.

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
     The strcpy() and stpcpy() functions are easily misused in a manner which
     enables malicious users to arbitrarily change a running program's func‐
     tionality through a buffer overflow attack.

BSD				  May 1, 2009				   BSD
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