return ret;
}
-/* Defined after fortified strlen() to reuse it. */
-extern size_t __real_strlcpy(char *, const char *, size_t) __RENAME(strlcpy);
-/**
- * strlcpy - Copy a string into another string buffer
- *
- * @p: pointer to destination of copy
- * @q: pointer to NUL-terminated source string to copy
- * @size: maximum number of bytes to write at @p
- *
- * If strlen(@q) >= @size, the copy of @q will be truncated at
- * @size - 1 bytes. @p will always be NUL-terminated.
- *
- * Do not use this function. While FORTIFY_SOURCE tries to avoid
- * over-reads when calculating strlen(@q), it is still possible.
- * Prefer strscpy(), though note its different return values for
- * detecting truncation.
- *
- * Returns total number of bytes written to @p, including terminating NUL.
- *
- */
-__FORTIFY_INLINE size_t strlcpy(char * const POS p, const char * const POS q, size_t size)
-{
- const size_t p_size = __member_size(p);
- const size_t q_size = __member_size(q);
- size_t q_len; /* Full count of source string length. */
- size_t len; /* Count of characters going into destination. */
-
- if (p_size == SIZE_MAX && q_size == SIZE_MAX)
- return __real_strlcpy(p, q, size);
- q_len = strlen(q);
- len = (q_len >= size) ? size - 1 : q_len;
- if (__builtin_constant_p(size) && __builtin_constant_p(q_len) && size) {
- /* Write size is always larger than destination. */
- if (len >= p_size)
- __write_overflow();
- }
- if (size) {
- if (len >= p_size)
- fortify_panic(__func__);
- __underlying_memcpy(p, q, len);
- p[len] = '\0';
- }
- return q_len;
-}
-
/* Defined after fortified strnlen() to reuse it. */
extern ssize_t __real_strscpy(char *, const char *, size_t) __RENAME(strscpy);
/**
* @p buffer. The behavior is undefined if the string buffers overlap. The
* destination @p buffer is always NUL terminated, unless it's zero-sized.
*
- * Preferred to strlcpy() since the API doesn't require reading memory
- * from the source @q string beyond the specified @size bytes, and since
- * the return value is easier to error-check than strlcpy()'s.
- * In addition, the implementation is robust to the string changing out
- * from underneath it, unlike the current strlcpy() implementation.
- *
* Preferred to strncpy() since it always returns a valid string, and
* doesn't unnecessarily force the tail of the destination buffer to be
* zero padded. If padding is desired please use strscpy_pad().
EXPORT_SYMBOL(strncpy);
#endif
-#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRLCPY
-size_t strlcpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t size)
-{
- size_t ret = strlen(src);
-
- if (size) {
- size_t len = (ret >= size) ? size - 1 : ret;
- __builtin_memcpy(dest, src, len);
- dest[len] = '\0';
- }
- return ret;
-}
-EXPORT_SYMBOL(strlcpy);
-#endif
-
#ifndef __HAVE_ARCH_STRSCPY
ssize_t strscpy(char *dest, const char *src, size_t count)
{