FGETS(3) | Library Functions Manual | FGETS(3) |
fgets
— get a line
from a stream
#include
<stdio.h>
char *
fgets
(char
*str, int size,
FILE *stream);
The
fgets
()
function reads at most size-1 characters from the
given stream and stores them in the string
str. Reading stops when a newline character is found,
at end-of-file, on error, or after size-1 bytes are
read. The newline, if any, is retained. The string will be NUL-terminated if
fgets
() succeeds; otherwise the contents of
str are undefined.
Upon successful completion, fgets
()
returns a pointer to the string. If end-of-file or an error occurs before
any characters are read, it returns NULL
. The
fgets
() function does not distinguish between
end-of-file and error, and callers must use
feof(3) and
ferror(3) to determine which
occurred. Whether fgets
() can possibly fail with a
size argument of 1 is implementation-dependent. On
OpenBSD, fgets
() will never
return NULL
when size is
1.
EBADF
]EINVAL
]The function fgets
() may also fail and set
errno for any of the errors specified for the routines
fflush(3),
fstat(2),
read(2), or
malloc(3).
The function fgets
() conforms to
ANSI X3.159-1989
(“ANSI C89”).
The function fgets
() first appeared in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX.
The following bit of code illustrates a case where the programmer assumes a string is too long if it does not contain a newline:
char buf[1024], *p; while (fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), fp) != NULL) { if ((p = strchr(buf, '\n')) == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "input line too long.\n"); exit(1); } *p = '\0'; printf("%s\n", buf); }
While the error would be true if a line > 1023 characters were read, it would be false in two other cases:
fgets
() will not contain a newline either. Thus
strchr
() will return NULL
and the program will terminate, even if the line was valid.strchr
(),
correctly assume the end of the string is represented by a NUL
(‘\0’) character. If the first character of a line returned
by fgets
() were NUL,
strchr
() would immediately return without
considering the rest of the returned text which may indeed include a
newline.Consider using getline(3) instead when dealing with untrusted input.
It is erroneous to assume that fgets
()
never returns an empty string when successful. If a line starts with the NUL
character, fgets will store the NUL and continue reading until it encounters
a newline or end-of-file. This will result in an empty string being
returned. The following bit of code illustrates a case where the programmer
assumes the string cannot be zero length.
char buf[1024]; if (fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), fp) != NULL) { /* WRONG */ if (buf[strlen(buf) - 1] == '\n') buf[strlen(buf) - 1] = '\0'; }
If strlen
() returns 0, the index into the
buffer becomes -1. One way to concisely and correctly trim a newline is
shown below.
char buf[1024]; if (fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), fp) != NULL) buf[strcspn(buf, "\n")] = '\0';
December 1, 2017 | OpenBSD-6.9 |