Defined in header <string.h> | ||
---|---|---|
void *memset( void *dest, int ch, size_t count ); | (1) | |
errno_t memset_s( void *dest, rsize_t destsz, int ch, rsize_t count ); | (2) | (since C11) |
(unsigned char)ch
into each of the first count
characters of the object pointed to by dest
.dest
is a null pointer.ch
in every location of the destination range [dest, dest+destsz)
if dest
and destsz
are themselves valid: dest
is a null pointer destsz
or count
is greater than RSIZE_MAX
count
is greater than destsz
(buffer overflow would occur)dest
< count
<= destsz
; in other words, an erroneous value of destsz
does not expose the impending buffer overflow. As with all bounds-checked functions, memset_s
is only guaranteed to be available if __STDC_LIB_EXT1__
is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__
to the integer constant 1
before including <string.h>
.dest | - | pointer to the object to fill |
ch | - | fill byte |
count | - | number of bytes to fill |
destsz | - | size of the destination array |
dest
dest
is not a null pointer and destsz
is valid, writes destsz
fill bytes ch
to the destination array.memset
may be optimized away (under the as-if rules) if the object modified by this function is not accessed again for the rest of its lifetime (e.g., gcc bug 8537). For that reason, this function cannot be used to scrub memory (e.g., to fill an array that stored a password with zeroes). This optimization is prohibited for memset_s
: it is guaranteed to perform the memory write. Third-party solutions for that include FreeBSD explicit_bzero
or Microsoft SecureZeroMemory
.
#define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ 1 #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { char str[] = "ghghghghghghghghghghgh"; puts(str); memset(str,'a',5); puts(str); #ifdef __STDC_LIB_EXT1__ set_constraint_handler_s(ignore_handler_s); int r = memset_s(str, sizeof str, 'b', 5); printf("str = \"%s\", r = %d\n", str, r); r = memset_s(str, 5, 'c', 10); // count is greater than destsz printf("str = \"%s\", r = %d\n", str, r); #endif }
Possible output:
ghghghghghghghghghghgh aaaaahghghghghghghghgh str = "bbbbbhghghghghghghghgh", r = 0 str = "ccccchghghghghghghghgh", r = 22
(C11) | copies one buffer to another (function) |
(C95) | copies the given wide character to every position in a wide character array (function) |
C++ documentation for memset |
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