I could probably try patching it. That C99 specification seems descriptive enough. On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:51 PM Rich Felker wrote: > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 10:48:38PM -0500, Rich Felker wrote: > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 06:55:24PM -0800, Keyhan Vakil wrote: > > > Hi. It seems that the gets function does not follow the C99 spec. In > > > particular, if the input contains a null byte in the middle of the > > > input, then the new-line character is not discarded. > > > > > > For reference, here's the relevant part in the C99 standard > > > (7.19.7.7): > > > > > > > The gets function reads characters from the input stream pointed to > > > > by stdin, into the array pointed to by s, until end-of-file is > > > > encountered or a new-line character is read. Any new-line character > > > > is discarded, and a null character is written immediately after the > > > > last character read into the array. > > > > > > Here is an example: > > > > > > #include > > > char s[8]; > > > int main() { > > > gets(s); > > > for (int i = 0; i < sizeof s; i++) { > > > printf("%02x ", s[i]); > > > } > > > printf("\n"); > > > return 0; > > > } > > > > > > When compiled against gcc: > > > > > > $ echo -e 'A\x00B' | ./a.out > > > 41 00 42 00 00 00 00 00 > > > > > > When compiled against musl: > > > > > > $ echo -e 'A\x00B' | ./a.out > > > 41 00 42 0a 00 00 00 00 > > > > > > Note the terminating newline, which contradicts the spec. > > > > I think this bug report is correct; however the gets function is > > awful, removed in C11, and should never be used. :-) > > > > I will see what can be done to fix it though. > > Is gets(s) equivalent to scanf("%[^\n]%*1[\n]",s)? If so that would be > an appropriately hideous way to implement it that avoids the current > bug? :-) > > Rich >