Name

strcat, strncat
- concatenate two strings

Library

libc.lib

Synopsis

  #include <string.h>
  char * strcat (char * restrict s, const char * restrict append);
  char * strncat (char * restrict s, const char * restrict append, size_t count);

Return values

The strcat and strncat functions return the pointer s.

Detailed description

The strcat and strncat functions append a copy of the null-terminated string append to the end of the null-terminated string s, then add a terminating \0.’ The string s must have sufficient space to hold the result.

The strncat function appends not more than count characters from append, and then adds a terminating \0.


Examples

#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
    char one[50] = {"\0"};              
    strcpy(one,"Hello");
    strcat(one," World");
    printf("Concatenated String %s\n",one);
    return 0;   
}

         

Output

Concatenated String Hello World

         

Security considerations

The strcat function is easily misused in a manner which enables malicious users to arbitrarily change a running program’s functionality through a buffer overflow attack.

Avoid using strcat. Instead, use strncat or strlcat and ensure that no more characters are copied to the destination buffer than it can hold.

Note that strncat can also be problematic. It may be a security concern for a string to be truncated at all. Since the truncated string will not be as long as the original, it may refer to a completely different resource and usage of the truncated resource could result in very incorrect behavior. Example:

void
foo(const char *arbitrary_string)
{
        char onstack[8];
#if defined(BAD)
        /*
         * This first strcat is bad behavior.  Do not use strcat!
         */
        (void)strcat(onstack, arbitrary_string);        /* BAD! */
#elif defined(BETTER)
        /*
         * The following two lines demonstrate better use of
         * strncat().
         */
        (void)strncat(onstack, arbitrary_string,
            sizeof(onstack) - strlen(onstack) - 1);
#elif defined(BEST)
        /*
         * These lines are even more robust due to testing for
         * truncation.
         */
        if (strlen(arbitrary_string) + 1 >
            sizeof(onstack) - strlen(onstack))
                err(1, "onstack would be truncated");
        (void)strncat(onstack, arbitrary_string,
            sizeof(onstack) - strlen(onstack) - 1);
#endif
}

         


See also

bcopy, memcpy, memmove, strcpy

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