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FMTCHECK(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual FMTCHECK(3)
NAME
fmtcheck - sanitizes user-supplied printf(3)-style format string
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
const char *
fmtcheck(const char *fmt_suspect, const char *fmt_default);
DESCRIPTION
The fmtcheck() scans fmt_suspect and fmt_default to determine if
fmt_suspect will consume the same argument types as fmt_default and to
ensure that fmt_suspect is a valid format string.
The printf(3) family of functions cannot verify the types of arguments
that they are passed at run-time. In some cases, like catgets(3), it is
useful or necessary to use a user-supplied format string with no
guarantee that the format string matches the specified arguments.
The fmtcheck() was designed to be used in these cases, as in:
printf(fmtcheck(user_format, standard_format), arg1, arg2);
In the check, field widths, fillers, precisions, etc. are ignored (unless
the field width or precision is an asterisk `*' instead of a digit
string). Also, any text other than the format specifiers is completely
ignored.
RETURN VALUES
If fmt_suspect is a valid format and consumes the same argument types as
fmt_default, then the fmtcheck() will return fmt_suspect. Otherwise, it
will return fmt_default.
SEE ALSO
printf(3)
BUGS
The fmtcheck() function does not recognize positional parameters.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
Note that the formats may be quite different as long as they accept the
same arguments. For example, "%p %o %30s %#llx %-10.*e %n" is compatible
with "This number %lu %d%% and string %s has %qd numbers and %.*g floats
(%n)". However, "%o" is not equivalent to "%lx" because the first
requires an integer and the second requires a long.
FreeBSD 14.2-RELEASE October 16, 2002 FreeBSD 14.2-RELEASE